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Book review The Italian Teacher - A monstrous ego propels a lively tale about modern art

Tom Rachman's newest and best, book is a novel about modern art and a dysfunctional family over 50 years.

March 23, 2018 15:49
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Tom Rachman is on a roll. Two acclaimed novels and an excellent book of short stories about Trump’s America, all in a few years. Now comes The Italian Teacher, a novel about modern art and a dysfunctional family over 50 years. This is Rachman’s best novel yet. No mean achievement.

It begins in Rome in 1955. Charles (known affectionately as Pinch) is the son of two artists, Bear Bavinsky and his wife Natalie. Bear is an American painter, from that famous post-war generation of Pollock, Rothko and de Kooning. He’s “the archetype of an immoral Greenwich Village artist”, a creature of appetites.

By the end of the novel, he’s been through six marriages and fathered 17 children, most of whom he treats with cruel indifference.

Some people put a little sauce on the side of their meat. Bear “deluged his meat” with sauce. When he’s offered a plate of cookies he “grabs three”. Everyone else speaks. He “hollers”. He has an ego the size of the Guggenheim.