
Named a most anticipated book of 2021 by The Guardian and The Millions
An aesthetic and existential coming-of-age novel exploring the apprenticeship of a young female painter.
"So good it makes me want to puke . . . I discovered Painting Time in a bookstore, never having heard of its author, and went on to recommend it widely and increasingly indignantly to many people . . . [Kerangal's] books aren't just technical portraits but careful, steady re-creations of emotional worlds . . . [Painting Time] derives its power from the precision that accrues within it." --Lauren Oyler, The New Yorker
"There is something magnificently true about De Kerangal's fiction, which braids technical fluency with winged prose . . . 'Capsules of pure sensation'-it's a description worth stealing to describe this novel, which is strung together image by beautiful image. This is writing that defies haste, that slows the eye . . . That [De Kerangal's] new novel's painterly resonances feel elemental, rather than effortful, cements her reputation as one of contemporary fiction's most gifted sentence builders." --Beejay Silcox, The Guardian "[Decorative painting] is given a thrilling treatment in Maylis de Kerangal's [Painting Time] . . . Who else writes with such poetry about the tools of trade, and the intricacies of work? Michael Ondaatje springs to mind, but Maylis de Kerangal is mining a rich and individual seam." --Jonathan Gibbs, Times Literary Supplement "Celebrated French novelist Kerangal . . . is a master of the metaphysical bildungsroman . . . [An] enthralling tale of vocation, discovery, and love . . . Kerangal balances the gloriously sensuous with the deeply reflective in an exquisite and omniscient streaming narration as she explores the title's implications . . . Kerangal's elegant, sexy, subtly Proustian, and fluidly dimensional drama of discipline and passion, imitation and imagination is resplendently evocative and exhilarating." --Donna Seaman, Booklist "As she did with The Cook, award-winning French author de Kerangal offers stunning portraiture suffused with the joy and meaning of work. . .There's only one word for it: superbe." --Library Journal (starred review) "[A] sensuous, language-relishing, richly evocative new work . . . A curiosity as introspective, finely wrought, and devotedly crafted as the art form it traces." --Kirkus Reviews