Reviews for The Glassmaker: (Large Print)

Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

“Time passes differently” in this centuries-spanning story set on the Island of Glass. This impressive novel about family, art, and tradition takes place on Murano, just off the coast of Venice, Italy, where generations of artisans have created beautiful glassware. Chevalier centers this engaging story on Orsola Rosso, who, as the novel opens in 1486, watches with envy as the men in her family turn molten glass into goblets, platters, and bowls using techniques passed from father to son. Tradition can’t stop Orsola, who learns how to make glass beads that can be used to create exquisite jewelry. The money Orsola earns from her creations will save her family many times over the course of the novel as the world changes and Murano’s fortunes rise and fall. Chevalier cleverly warps the time continuum on Murano—decades can pass, but the people age only a few years. She situates us in the real world, though, where—like swirls of color that appear to flow through translucent glass—history moves forward from the Italian Renaissance through plagues, the Napoleonic era, and world wars up to the 21st century and Covid-19. Time barely ages the Muranese, but their lives are impacted by the outer world’s changes and upheavals. Between fascinating descriptions of artisans at work and the glassware they create, Chevalier embeds a love story that transcends time as Orsola, across 500 years, holds on to the love she carries for a man she knew in her youth. With colorful narrative and dialogue, Chevalier—author of Girl With a Pearl Earring (1999)—lets time roll forward through independent women who are determined to shape glass into works of art and frame life paths of their own design. History flows like molten glass in this stunning novel that borders on fantasy. Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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