Rachel Dacus is the author of the new novel The Renaissance Club. Set in Italy, it features time travel and art. Her other books include the poetry collections Arabesque and Earth Lessons. She lives in the San Francisco area.
Q:
You note that you were inspired to write The Renaissance Club after a trip to
Italy. Why did you decide to focus on the artist Gianlorenzo Bernini?
A:
Bernini’s art is something you really don’t see much in America. His
masterpieces are life-size or larger statues, some of them entire church
interiors. I was already aware of other Renaissance art, but seeing Bernini’s
in person was astonishing.
The
monumental scale of some, life-size intimacy of other, combined with a high
level of detailed realism made me realize why Bernini was thought of as one of
the great artistic geniuses. The work has such impact in person, and most of it
can’t be transported anywhere else.
Q:
What kind of research did you need to do to write the novel?
A:
There are only two biographies on Bernini that are worth looking into as
primary or secondary sources. One is the biography written by his son, which is
a combination between the family advertising campaign and a true chronological
account of a life. The other is a recent book by Franco Mormando, a professor
at Boston College.
I
relied mostly on his research, along with a marvelous recent biography of
Costanza Piccolomini, Bernini’s mistress, by Sarah McPhee. Her book, Bernini’s
Beloved, not only gives a picture of the artist and his times, but gives a very
important picture of the situation of women in Bernini’s 17th century Rome.
Q:
How did you come up with your character May, and also your mysterious character
George?
A:
May Gold is a wishful portrait of a young woman going into a field I might have
enjoyed, art history. I started with that idea, and having friends who went
into that, I got a picture of how hard it is to make a living as an art
historian, but how rewarding it would be to try.
George
St. James is a composite from someone I know, a guide of a different kind who
seemed to know so much you might have thought he could travel through time and
meet everybody who was anybody. He’ll appear in a prequel I’m working on, and
in a sequel I’m also planning.
Q:
What do you hope readers take away from the story?
A:
I hope readers take away a renewed love of art (assuming readers of this book
already love it), and a feeling for the sacrifices that make up the tapestry of
love.
Q:
This is the first in a series--what are you working on now?
A:
I’m working on the prequel to The Renaissance Club, a story which has George
St. James as the central character. And I’m also planning a sequel, with May
Gold appearing, along with her cousin, who comes to join May on a summer art
restoration project in Florence. So I’m staying with time travel and art! Also,
love stories will feature in both books, though neither book is a romance
novel.
Q:
Anything else we should know?
A:
My interest in art and my notions about time travel were both sparked by a
childhood spent around art and artists, as my father was a very good painter.
As a rocket engineer, he also collected science fiction and knew several of the
early sci-fi writers, who were also involved with the rocket business. So an
interest in time travel possibilities is natural for me.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
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