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Review: The Marriage of Opposites

Fiery antecedents of a great colourist

October 15, 2015 12:49
Camille Pissarro’s Les glaneuses (The gleaners), 1889

ByJennifer Lipman, Jennifer Lipman

2 min read

By Alice Hoffman
Simon & Schuster

Best-selling American author Alice Hoffman's latest novel, The Marriage of Opposites, is a fictionalised retelling of how the artist Camille Pissarro - born Jacob Abraham Camille on the Caribbean island of St Thomas - became one of the most influential Impressionists and Post-Impressionists. But Camille does not appear until the second half of the novel. The first, superior part deals with the fiery, complicated relationship between his parents.

In Hoffman's account, the outspoken, cerebral Rachel Pomie hails from one of the island's premier Jewish families. Forced to dress the part of the respectable lady, she is an undeclared feminist at a time when women could own no property. She is never happier than when exploring St Thomas' physical splendour with her friend, Jestine, of whose own, heartrending story we also learn.

After years of suffocating under the stern glare of her community, Rachel's decision to marry a French émigré leads to her being ostracised. For Frédérick, on paper a suitable match, is not merely several years her junior - a gap that would be remarked on to this day, but that was highly shocking in the early 1800s - but the nephew of Rachel's late husband. Passionately in love, they are thwarted at every turn, with rabbis slamming doors and the congregation spurning their company. Yet they refuse to give up.