The Marriage Portrait by Maggie O'Farrell is inspired by a young woman from the 16th Century - Lucrezia di Cosimo de Medici, who died shortly after her marriage to Alfonso, the Duke of Ferrara, aged just sixteen. We know this from the beginning so there really aren't many spoilers here. But we do see how Lucrezia gets to this point. We follow her childhood, where she was much more interested in her father's menagerie and spent more time with the servants in the kitchen than becoming a "lady" like her sisters. Lucrezia hadn't even thought about marriage, but then her elder sister, who had been promised to Alfonso, the Duke of Ferrara, suddenly died. Alfonso, keen that the link between these two powerful families would still happen, offers to take on Lucrezia instead, and she is prepared for the wedding. She enters into the marriage with some romantic notions, after all, Alfonso was very handsome, but as nobody really explained to her the full ramifications of what being a wife would really mean, her wedding night was a bit of a painful shock. This is no love match. Although Alfonso barely speaks to her, he visits her every night, desperate for her to produce an heir, which is all he really wants. So when one doesn't appear, his behaviour becomes increasingly erratic and when Alfonso takes her to a remote country villa, far away from her family, she begins to suspect that he is planning to kill her, so that he would be free to marry again... This is a very well written story full of character, action and emotion in a period setting. However, it is not always an easy read, as it vividly details the treatment of women at this time (1561), who are commodities to be bartered and discarded at the whim of men. I found the total lack of empathy for females appalling. Indeed, few of the male characters come out of this book with much to merit them. Lucrezia is full of vim and vigour and the reader totally roots for her to somehow escape what appears to be her destiny. There is a portrait of this young woman which has been the inspiration for stories and poems, and now this book. What really happened to Lucrezia may never be known, but it doesn't stop us wondering!
My STAR rating: FOUR.
Length: 448 print pages.
Price I paid: £4.00.
Formats available: print, unabridged audio download, ebook.
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