Blindspot
by A Gentleman in Exile and a Lady in Disguise
1st ed.
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Author
Contributions
- Lepore, Jill, 1966- - Contributor
Publication
2008 - Spiegel & Grau, New York, New York (State)
Language
English
Word Count
125,000 words, Guess
Page Count
500 pages
Identifiers
- Internet Archiveblindspotbygentl00kame
- Internet Archiveblindspotbygentkamel00kame
- ISBN-139780385526197
- ISBN-100385526199
- LibraryThing5868288
and 5 more
- Goodreads3085271
- Library of Congress Control Number2008003111
- OCLC Control Number191318105
- Better World Books9780385526197
- Open LibraryOL16444910M
Classifications
- DDC813/.6
- LCCPS3611.A466 B57 2008
- LCCPS3611.A466B57 2008
Description
"Tis a small canvas, this Boston," muses Stewart Jameson, a Scottish portrait painter who, having fled his debtors in Edinburgh, has washed up on America's far shores. Eager to begin anew in this new world, he advertises for an apprentice, but the lad who comes knocking is no lad at all. Fanny Easton is a lady in disguise, a young, fallen woman from Boston's most prominent family. "I must make this Jameson see my artist's touch, but not my woman's form," Fanny writes, in a letter to her best friend. "I would turn my talent into capital, and that capital into liberty."Liberty is what everyone's seeking in boisterous, rebellious Boston on the eve of the American Revolution. But everyone suffers from a kind of blind spot, too. Jameson, distracted by his haunted past, can't see that Fanny is a woman; Fanny, consumed with her own masquerade, can't tell that Jameson is falling in love with her. The city's Sons of Liberty can't quite see their way clear, either. "Ably do they see the shackles Parliament fastens about them," Jameson writes, "but to the fetters they clasp upon their own slaves, they are strangely blind."Written with wit and exuberance by longtime friends and accomplished historians Jane Kamensky and Jill Lepore, Blindspot weaves together invention with actual historical documents in an affectionate send-up of the best of eighteenth-century fiction, from epistolary novels like Richardson's Clarissa to Sterne's picaresque Tristram Shandy. Prodigiously learned, beautifully crafted, and lush with the bawdy, romping sensibility of the age, Blindspot celebrates the art of the Enlightenment and the passion of the American Revolution by telling stories we know and those we don't, stories of the everyday lives of ordinary people caught up in an extraordinary time.
Description
In Boston in 1764, the sudden death of revolutionary leader Samuel Bradstreet causes Scottish portrait painter Stewart Jameson and his apprentice Francis Weston--who is really a fallen woman from an elite family disguised as a boy--to search for the truth.
Subjects
Topics
Times
Genres
- Fiction
Other Editions
- Blindspot: by A Gentleman in Exile and a Lady in Disguise
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