Booklist Reviews
Barnes (The Only Story, 2018) returns to nonfiction to present a fascinating study focused on Samuel Jean de Pozzi, a French gynecologist, pioneering surgeon, politician, womanizer, and omnipresent celebrity in Belle Époque France. Barnes begins with a trip Pozzi took to London with Prince de Polignac and Count de Montesquiou-Fezensac. Pozzi treated the dandies, aesthetes, and artists of the period for the ailments caused by their sexual (mis)adventures, drugs, or the many duels of the age. Originating from a middle-class background, Pozzi rose to share the same circles as the most lauded artists of the age, befriending figures such as Sarah Bernhardt (a lifelong friend and possible lover), Henry James, and Oscar Wilde. Indeed, Wilde constantly reappears in this work, as Barnes explores how his own relationship with Wilde's writing has changed over the years. In this wryly humored historical sketch of an incredibly complex and influential era, Pozzi is a fascinating conduit for Barnes to provide intriguing anecdotes, numerous photographs and paintings, ruminations on the act of biography, and many provocative connections to the present. Copyright 2020 Booklist Reviews.
Kirkus Reviews
A fresh, urbane history of the dramatic and melodramatic belle epoque. When Barnes (The Only Story, 2018, etc.), winner of the Man Booker Prize and many other literary awards, first saw John Singer Sargent's striking portrait of Dr. Samuel Pozzi—handsome, "virile, yet slender," dressed in a sumptuous scarlet coat—he was intrigued by a figure he had not yet encountered in his readings about 19th-century France. The wall label revealed that Pozzi was a gynecologist; a magazine article called him "not only the father of French gynecology, but also a confirmed sex addict who routinely attempted to seduce his female patients." The paradox of healer and exploiter posed an alluring mystery that Barnes was eager to investigate. Pozzi, he discovered, succeeded in his amorous affairs as much as in his acclaimed career. "I have never met a man as seductive as Pozzi," the arrogant Count Robert de Montesquiou recalled; Pozzi was a "man of rare good sense and rare good taste," "filled with knowledge and purpose" as well as "grace and charm." The a uthor's portrait, as admiring as Sargent's, depicts a "hospitable, generous" man, "rich by marriage, clubbable, inquisitive, cultured and well travelled," and brilliant. The cosmopolitan Pozzi, his supercilious friend Montesquiou, and "gentle, whimsical" Edmond de Polignac are central characters in Barnes' irreverent, gossipy, sparkling history of the belle epoque, "a time of vast wealth for the wealthy, of social power for the aristocracy, of uncontrolled and intricate snobbery, of headlong colonial ambition, of artistic patronage, and of duels whose scale of violence often reflected personal irascibility more than offended honor." Dueling, writes the author, "was not just the highest form of sport, it also required the highest form of manliness." Barnes peoples his history with a spirited cast of characters, including Sargent and Whistler, Oscar Wilde and Sarah Bernhardt (who adored Pozzi), Henry James and Proust, Pozzi's diarist daughter, Catherine, and unhappy wife, Ther e se, and scores more. Finely honed biographical intuition and a novelist's sensibility make for a stylish, engrossing narrative. Copyright Kirkus 2019 Kirkus/BPI Communications. All rights reserved.
Library Journal Reviews
In summer 1885, three Frenchmen arrived together in London, among them Samuel Pozzi, a surgeon and man of science important enough to get himself painted by John Singer Sargent (
LJ Express Reviews
Award-winning author Barnes (
Publishers Weekly Reviews
Inspired by seeing John Singer Sargent's portrait of Samuel Jean Pozzi at the National Gallery in London, Booker Prize–winner Barnes (