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The Lady and the Unicorn

Average rating: 4/5

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The Lady and the Unicorn

by Tracy Chevalier

December 19, 2003 | Hardcover

The Lady and the Unicorn tapestries that inspired Tracy Chevalier''s novel of the same name are quite real. Beautiful, large, intricate, and expertly made, all six of them hang today in the Museum of the Middle Ages (aka the Cluny Museum) in Paris, bewitching art experts and enthusiasts alike for centuries with their splendor and dual mysteries. The first mystery involves the identity of who commissioned the tapestries. While the coat of arms featured on each of the tapestries is that of the Le Vistes, a bourgeois family from Lyon who became members of the French court by virtue of their wealth, it has never been resolved which Le Viste they refer to. Most historians believe it to be Jean IV, a president of the Cour des Aides and renowned art patron who died in 1500, although others suggest that it was Jean TV''s cousin Aubert (advisor to the Parliament) or Aubert''s son, Antoine, who was president of the Parliament in 1523. Further advancing the Le Viste connection to the tapestries is the unicorn depicted in them. In old French, "viste means "fast," and the unicorn is recognized as a symbol of speed. The second, and far more complex, mystery regards the meaning of the tapestries. In each tapestry, an elegant lady and a unicorn stand or sit on a blue island of grass surrounded by a rich red background. For the last eighty years or so, it has been recognized that five of the tapestries depict the five senses--the lady shows the unicorn its reflection in a mirror (sight), the lady plays an organ (hearing), the lady lays her hand on the horn of the unicorn (touch), the lady weaves a crown of carnations while a monkey sniffs one (smell), and the lady accepts a candy offered to her byservant--as does a monkey (taste). The riddle of the sixth tapestry is not so readily deciphered. In it, the lady is placing the necklace she had worn in the previous five tapestries into a jewel case as she stands in front of a grand pavilion, with a lion and the unicorn holding the flaps of the entrance open. Emblazoned above the entrance in gold is the phrase "A mon seul desir ("To my one desire"). Some interpret this tapestry as a renunciation of the five senses; some argue that it shows that love is the sixth sense, while still others say that depicts the power of the intellect as the sixth sense. Regardless of how they interpret their meaning, those who have viewed the Lady and the Unicorn tapestries are united in their belief of the beauty, majesty, power, and drama the tapestries convey.
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Reviews

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    Rating: 3/5

    Lady and the Unicorn

    Nicchic

    3 years ago

    In my opinion not as good as Girl With a Pearl Earring. Just as much historical detail and I liked the view into the art of tapestry weaving but all the characters have this overstated willfulness to them - while I enjoyed the more subtle tension in Girl With a Pearl Earring. Tracy Chevalier packs much more of the historical background into the plot in less pages than most authors of the genre do, and so the storyline is compromised as it jumps from character to character.

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      helpful to you?

    Rating: 5/5

    Excellent!!

    Lauren

    • Top Book Reviewer
    • Most Interesting

    4 years ago

    Chevalier takes us into the artisan world of painters and weavers to describe a set of tapestries commissioned by the Le Viste family. The painter, Nicholas, convinces Le Viste to switch from battle tapestries to those following the story of the lady and the unicorn, which is a sensual story. The tapestries exist in real life but Chevalier makes up a story to envision how they were created.
    Meanwhile, Nicholas tries to seduce every woman he meets, including Le Viste's daughter. He considers himself quite the charmer and his ways don't change when he is sent to Belgium to help the weavers.

    The story is told from different characters' viewpoints - everyone from Nicholas, to Le Viste's daughter, to members of the weaver's family. Even with the switches in narration, the story is smooth and makes sense. It's easy to connect with the characters and wonder what will happen to them.

    I was intrigued enough after finishing the book to go look up what the tapestries actually look like. If you do the same, make sure you find the picture where they are all hung up in the same room! It's quite something!

    • Was this review
      helpful to you?

    Rating: 4/5

    very good

    Toni Osborne

    • Top Book Reviewer

    4 years ago

    I loved this book, the author uses seven different narrative voices , all consistent and clear which makes a far more intense and emotional reading. The mysterious Unicorn tapestry certainly makes a rich and elaborate story.

    • Was this review
      helpful to you?
    Judy Littler

    Rating: 5/5

    The Lady and the Unicorn

    Judy Littler

    6 years ago

    This is one of the best books I've read this year. Once I started, I couldn't put it down. I love the time period. I highly recommend this book. Tracey Chevalier's other book called The Girl With the Pearl Earring was also very good. Sandra Gullard's books about Napoleon Bonaparte's wife Josephine are a great read, as well.

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Details

From the Publisher

The Lady and the Unicorn tapestries that inspired Tracy Chevalier''s novel of the same name are quite real. Beautiful, large, intricate, and expertly made, all six of them hang today in the Museum of the Middle Ages (aka the Cluny Museum) in Paris, bewitching art experts and enthusiasts alike for centuries with their splendor and dual mysteries. The first mystery involves the identity of who commissioned the tapestries. While the coat of arms featured on each of the tapestries is that of the Le Vistes, a bourgeois family from Lyon who became members of the French court by virtue of their wealth, it has never been resolved which Le Viste they refer to. Most historians believe it to be Jean IV, a president of the Cour des Aides and renowned art patron who died in 1500, although others suggest that it was Jean TV''s cousin Aubert (advisor to the Parliament) or Aubert''s son, Antoine, who was president of the Parliament in 1523. Further advancing the Le Viste connection to the tapestries is the unicorn depicted in them. In old French, "viste means "fast," and the unicorn is recognized as a symbol of speed. The second, and far more complex, mystery regards the meaning of the tapestries. In each tapestry, an elegant lady and a unicorn stand or sit on a blue island of grass surrounded by a rich red background. For the last eighty years or so, it has been recognized that five of the tapestries depict the five senses--the lady shows the unicorn its reflection in a mirror (sight), the lady plays an organ (hearing), the lady lays her hand on the horn of the unicorn (touch), the lady weaves a crown of carnations while a monkey sniffs one (smell), and the lady accepts a candy offered to her byservant--as does a monkey (taste). The riddle of the sixth tapestry is not so readily deciphered. In it, the lady is placing the necklace she had worn in the previous five tapestries into a jewel case as she stands in front of a grand pavilion, with a lion and the unicorn holding the flaps of the entrance open. Emblazoned above the entrance in gold is the phrase "A mon seul desir ("To my one desire"). Some interpret this tapestry as a renunciation of the five senses; some argue that it shows that love is the sixth sense, while still others say that depicts the power of the intellect as the sixth sense. Regardless of how they interpret their meaning, those who have viewed the Lady and the Unicorn tapestries are united in their belief of the beauty, majesty, power, and drama the tapestries convey.

About the Author

Tracy Chevalier (born October 1962 in Washington, DC) is a bestselling historical novelist. She was raised in Washington, D.C and graduated from Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School in Bethesda, Maryland. After receiving her B.A. in English from Oberlin College, she moved to England in 1984 where she worked several years as a reference book editor. Leaving her job in 1993, she began a year-long M.A in creative writing at the University of East Anglia. Her career began with the book The Virgin Blue but she became well known with her novel Girl with a Pearl Earring, a book based on the creation of the famous painting by Vermeer. The film based on the novel received three Academy Award nominations in 2004. Burning Bright, published in March 2007, concerns two children who become neighbors of William Blake in London in 1792. Her latest novel is Remarkable Creatures, based on the life of the English 19th-century fossil collector Mary Anning. She lives in London with her husband and son.

Hardcover

8.25 x 6 x 0.95 in

December 19, 2003

English


0525947671
9780525947677

From the Critics

"Few can remain indifferent to the fairy-tale atmosphere created by the six tapestries hung in an oval room.... There are few museum rooms in Europe where the power of the medieval message casts so strong a spell even though it cannot be deciphered. Perhaps it is best that way. The art hits us in the face with hypnotic force, compelling us to shut down our discourse as we always should in contemplation."

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