The Queen's Embroiderer: A True Story of Paris, Lovers, Swindlers, and the First Stock Market Crisis
Autor Joan DeJeanen Limba Engleză Hardback – 8 aug 2018
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781632864741
ISBN-10: 1632864746
Pagini: 400
Ilustrații: B/W illustrations throughout; 1 x 8 page colour insert
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 36 mm
Greutate: 0.68 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Publishing
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1632864746
Pagini: 400
Ilustrații: B/W illustrations throughout; 1 x 8 page colour insert
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 36 mm
Greutate: 0.68 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Publishing
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Caracteristici
French flair: With Paris, Versailles, and the Bastille as backdrop to this breathtaking history, Francophiles and fans of Graham Robb's bestselling Parisians will flock to this new book. DeJean is completely in her element--her past two books, How Paris Became Paris and The Age of Comfort, are both meticulously researched and artfully told histories of France.
Notă biografică
Joan DeJean has been Trustee Professor at the University of Pennsylvania since 1988. She previously taught at Yale and at Princeton. She is the author of eleven books on French literature, history, and material culture of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, including most recently How Paris Became Paris: The Invention of the Modern City (2014); The Age of Comfort: When Paris Discovered Casual--and the Modern Home Began (2009); The Essence of Style: How the French Invented High Fashion, Fine Food, Chic Cafés, Style, Sophistication, and Glamour (2005). She lives in Philadelphia and, when in Paris, around the corner from the house where, in 1612, this story began.
Recenzii
A fascinating true story based on formidable detective work in the archives.
A convincing recreation of a feverish period in French history . . . DeJean guides the reader sure-footedly through the labyrinth of financial and family law, low and high politicking and general skulduggery that characterised the era . . . A fascinating and original book whose central importance is to have captured the turmoil, confusion and sometimes sheer wickedness that accompanied the formation of early modern capitalism.
The tale of two 17th- and 18th-century French families, a story that begins as a fairy tale and ends as a nightmare.
[The Queen's Embroiderer] features guild-hopping, inheritance fraud, domestic abuse, eloping to England, sending toddlers to their deaths, locking the gates against the poor, and the occasional escape from a chain gang. There's an impressive depth of research-this is, as much as anything else, a mystery about the manipulation of record-keeping and identity . . . Some aspects of the wider upheaval are striking, as DeJean builds a credible picture of the mania of a nation becoming an empire: Monarchy as economy, war as opportunity, slavery as profit margin. . . . That there are so few loose ends in this two-century saga is a testament to DeJean's research.
Joan DeJean tells the strange story of the Magoulet and Chevrot families, who rose to prominence as financiers and embroiderers to the French court . . . and shows how love and money made uncomfortable bed-mates.
This exceptional and thoroughly researched book follows two prominent Parisian families from the 1600s to the French Revolution (1789-1799).
As richly and intricately wrought as a French tapestry. Beautifully written and highly recommended.
DeJean is, in many ways, the perfect guide to the lives of Jean and Louise Magoulet and the darkly glittering, labyrinthine city in which they lived . . . Were it not for her, the full range of Magoulet's crimes would remain unknown. Her command of the period and the most minute details of its social, cultural and economic life is masterful . . . DeJean is a spirited observer of the past.
The Queen's Embroiderer reads like a riveting page turner ripped from today's headlines.
A tale of intrigue and finance in 18th-century France. And what a story it is! . . . Reading The Queen's Embroiderer is a bit like listening to a fascinating, erudite lecture or examining an elaborate piece of needlework. . . . If your plans for springtime in France haven't materialized, don't despair. Just open The Queen's Embroiderer and you'll find yourself transported.
In this twisted tale of two French families, DeJean interweaves the rise and fall of the Magoulets and the Chevrots, who took divergent paths to wealth, power, and ignominy . . . the fascinating details of seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Parisian fashion, politics, and feuds will reward persevering readers.
Wittily written and impeccably researched . . . DeJean nimbly demonstrates the city's postcard-perfect charm owes much to the vision of two savvy monarchs.
This lively history charts the growth of Paris from a city of crowded alleyways and irregular buildings into a modern marvel.
A convincing recreation of a feverish period in French history . . . DeJean guides the reader sure-footedly through the labyrinth of financial and family law, low and high politicking and general skulduggery that characterised the era . . . A fascinating and original book whose central importance is to have captured the turmoil, confusion and sometimes sheer wickedness that accompanied the formation of early modern capitalism.
The tale of two 17th- and 18th-century French families, a story that begins as a fairy tale and ends as a nightmare.
[The Queen's Embroiderer] features guild-hopping, inheritance fraud, domestic abuse, eloping to England, sending toddlers to their deaths, locking the gates against the poor, and the occasional escape from a chain gang. There's an impressive depth of research-this is, as much as anything else, a mystery about the manipulation of record-keeping and identity . . . Some aspects of the wider upheaval are striking, as DeJean builds a credible picture of the mania of a nation becoming an empire: Monarchy as economy, war as opportunity, slavery as profit margin. . . . That there are so few loose ends in this two-century saga is a testament to DeJean's research.
Joan DeJean tells the strange story of the Magoulet and Chevrot families, who rose to prominence as financiers and embroiderers to the French court . . . and shows how love and money made uncomfortable bed-mates.
This exceptional and thoroughly researched book follows two prominent Parisian families from the 1600s to the French Revolution (1789-1799).
As richly and intricately wrought as a French tapestry. Beautifully written and highly recommended.
DeJean is, in many ways, the perfect guide to the lives of Jean and Louise Magoulet and the darkly glittering, labyrinthine city in which they lived . . . Were it not for her, the full range of Magoulet's crimes would remain unknown. Her command of the period and the most minute details of its social, cultural and economic life is masterful . . . DeJean is a spirited observer of the past.
The Queen's Embroiderer reads like a riveting page turner ripped from today's headlines.
A tale of intrigue and finance in 18th-century France. And what a story it is! . . . Reading The Queen's Embroiderer is a bit like listening to a fascinating, erudite lecture or examining an elaborate piece of needlework. . . . If your plans for springtime in France haven't materialized, don't despair. Just open The Queen's Embroiderer and you'll find yourself transported.
In this twisted tale of two French families, DeJean interweaves the rise and fall of the Magoulets and the Chevrots, who took divergent paths to wealth, power, and ignominy . . . the fascinating details of seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Parisian fashion, politics, and feuds will reward persevering readers.
Wittily written and impeccably researched . . . DeJean nimbly demonstrates the city's postcard-perfect charm owes much to the vision of two savvy monarchs.
This lively history charts the growth of Paris from a city of crowded alleyways and irregular buildings into a modern marvel.