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I’ll admit that I had an unfair advantage when I read this book. Not long before I read it, I’d spent a month living in Delft, the Dutch town where the painter Johannes Vermeer once lived — the same town that Tracy Chevalier wrote about in Girl with a Pearl Earring. I’d spent four weeks wandering through the market and listening to the bells of the church. And that made the book come to life for me.
I may have picked up the book because of my love of Delft, but I kept turning page after page because of my love of the story. After all, I’m sure that the multitude of people who read this book before me (enough to put it on The New York Times Bestseller List) didn’t all visit Delft before reading it. To them, it was a captivating story — one that was difficult to put down without reading just one more page.
Girl with a Pearl Earring is about Griet, a young girl who’s forced to leave her family to become a maid after her father loses his sight and can no longer support the family. Griet’s master, the painter Johannes Vermeer, hires her to help with household chores as well as to clean his studio — which requires her to be able to clean carefully without moving the objects that he’s painting. As she continues to work for Vermeer and his temperamental, perpetually-with-child wife, she gains Vermeer’s trust — as well as the favor of the butcher’s son and the advances of her master’s patron. Meanwhile, she fights to separate herself from the life of her wealthy master and mistress — and to try to remember who she is and where she came from.
The story may not be true, but Chevalier wrote it as though it were — as though she knew Griet personally. Girl with a Pearl Earring is a story that will make any reader look back at his or her own teen years — at the overwhelming emotions and the important decisions that had to be made. At the same time, Chevalier paints a beautiful picture of seventeenth-century Delft — and of Vermeer’s work. Girl with a Pearl Earring is a bestseller for a reason — and I encourage you to pick up a copy of your own and discover it for yourself.
Kristin Dreyer Kramer has been writing in some form or another (usually when she was supposed to be doing something else) since the ripe old age of ten—when she, her cousin, and their two Cabbage Patch Dolls formed the Poo Authors’ Club. After a short career in advertising, Kristin got sick of always saying nice things about stuff that didn’t deserve it—so now she spends her days criticizing things, and she’s much happier for it.
Since creating NightsAndWeekends.com in February of 2002, Kristin has spent her life surrounded by piles and piles of books and movies—so many that her office has become a kind of entertainment obstacle course.
As if her writing and editing responsibilities for N&W.com weren’t enough to keep her out of trouble, Kristin also hosts a number of weekly radio shows: Reel Discovery, Shelf Discovery, and On the Marquee. She’s also a proud member of the Broadcast Film Critics Association (CriticsChoice.com), the Central Ohio Film Critics Association (COFCA.org), the Online Film Critics Society (OFCS.org), and the Women Film Critics Circle (WFCC.Wordpress.com).
Kristin lives in Columbus, Ohio, with her husband, Paul, and their daughter, Anna. She welcomes questions, comments, and fan mail at kdk@nightsandweekends.com.
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Kristin Dreyer Kramer has been writing in some form or another (usually when she was supposed to be doing something else) since the ripe old age of ten—when she, her cousin, and their two Cabbage Patch Dolls formed the Poo Authors’ Club. After a short career in advertising, Kristin got sick of always saying nice things about stuff that didn’t deserve it—so now she spends her days criticizing things, and she’s much happier for it.
Since creating NightsAndWeekends.com in February of 2002, Kristin has spent her life surrounded by piles and piles of books and movies—so many that her office has become a kind of entertainment obstacle course.
As if her writing and editing responsibilities for N&W.com weren’t enough to keep her out of trouble, Kristin also hosts a number of weekly radio shows: Reel Discovery, Shelf Discovery, and On the Marquee. She’s also a proud member of the Broadcast Film Critics Association (CriticsChoice.com), the Central Ohio Film Critics Association (COFCA.org), the Online Film Critics Society (OFCS.org), and the Women Film Critics Circle (WFCC.Wordpress.com).
Kristin lives in Columbus, Ohio, with her husband, Paul, and their daughter, Anna. She welcomes questions, comments, and fan mail at kdk@nightsandweekends.com.