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A colourful mystery: The Improbability of Love by Hannah Rothschild

New Fiction

June 6, 2015 15:25
improbability of love

ByJoy Sable, Joy Sable

1 min read

At one time or another, we have all surely harboured that Antiques Roadshow fantasy: the old painting gathering dust in the loft turns out to be a lost masterpiece worth millions. For Annie McDee, heroine of Hannah Rothschild's The Improbability of Love (Bloomsbury, £14.99), the chance acquisition of a centuries-old revered work of art is a mixed blessing.

When Annie purchases the small painting from a junk shop for her waste-of-space boyfriend, she is plunged into the art world - a place inhabited by high-camp dealers, greedy Russian oligarchs, snobbish society women, and other assorted, unsavoury characters. For Annie has bought The Improbability of Love, a lost work by Antoine Watteau, one of the most influential French painters of the 18th century.

We follow Annie's attempts to discover more about the painting as she simultaneously copes with the demands of her alcoholic mother, an unsatisfactory love life and a job which is not the dream one she had once envisaged.

This sounds gloomy, but it is far from that - if you did not know much about the passion and power behind the doors of the great auction houses and art dealers, you will by the end of this enchanting tale.