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An Object of Beauty [Hardcover]

Steve Martin
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (35 customer reviews)

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Book Description

25 Nov 2010

Lacey Yeager is beautiful, captivating, and ambitious enough to take the NYC art world by storm. She begins her career at Sotheby's, amidst the winks and nods of the fabulously wealthy. But hungry for more - and pursued by a whiff of scandal - Lacey migrates to edgy Downtown, watching Hirsts and Warhols multiply in value before her eyes.

Charming men and women, old and young, rich and even richer, Lacey's ascendancy seems assured. But when the art world bubble looks set to burst, a secret from her past rears its head, threatening to undermine everything she has worked for.



Product details

  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: W&N; First Edition edition (25 Nov 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0297863290
  • ISBN-13: 978-0297863298
  • Product Dimensions: 16.2 x 23.7 x 3.4 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (35 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 304,052 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Review

Steve Martin...on the evidence of this book seems to be almost indecently multi-talented...Martin cunningly mixes the work of real artists with those of his own invention... it has something of The Great Gatsby about it...An Object of Beauty is an impressive and enjoyable book. The real protagonists of the novel are Art and Money - and the love affair between them (THE SUNDAY TIMES )

Substantial and profound...Martin casts the same sharp eye over Lacey's manipulation of her lovers as over her manipulation of the market. He launches a blistering attack on the banalities of conceptual art - not least when a billionaire collector grabs a Joseph Beuys Felt Suit from his wall after his tuxedo is stained. This is a rich and illuminating novel that neither relies on nor suffers from its author's celebrity status. (DAILY MAIL )

Funny man Steve Martin proves his literary mettle with this genuinely good novel examining the New York art world. Following a young intern determined to conquer the scene, it charts the complexities and absurdities of art-centric Manhattan. Think The Devil Wears Prada with paintbrushes. (GRAZIA )

[An Object of Beauty] has something intelligent to say about how taste and collecting have changed over the past ten years and how the easily understandable movements of the Sixties and Seventies have given way to the pluralism today, where anything goes. It shows how absurd most collectors and curators have become in their attempts to keep abreast of this shifting scene where money is no more real than the art it helps to buy. (THE SPECTATOR )

Lacey is a wonderfully enigmatic heroine...Martin sketches his characters deftly, evoking their world with ease...But the real objects of beauty are the art works themselves. Described lovingly, and illustrated with colour plates, it is evident why this medium is a passion for our characters and the author himself. Martin is illuminating and informative and has many a wise word...those with no prior interest in art should also reach the final page enlightened and captivated (DAILY EXPRESS )

Glistening with glamour, intrigue, ambition and betrayal, Steve Martin's (yes, the actor) novel is intoxicating. (EASY LIVING )

The expertise of Martin is dazzingly in evidence here...it is thoroughly delightful, evoking a vanished gilded age (NEW YORK TIMES )

a look behind the scenes of the New York art world. Charting the rise of glamorous Lacey Yeager it lifts the curtain on what drives collectors... a wry perceptive and properly told story from an insider and a fan. (ELLE )

Best known for classic films such as Parenthood and L.A. Story, Steve Martin is also an accomplished writer. His latest novel tells the story of ambitious Lacey Yeager, who's determined to crack the New York art world. However, her bubble looks set to burst as a secret from her past threatens to destroy everything she's worked for. (STAR (5 star review) )

An Object of Beauty charts the hedonistic and ugly underbelly of the New York art scene over the last 20 years. Slyly navigating its choppy waters is Lucy Yeager, an ambitious self-involved art seller who could enter a room 'with the pizzazz of a Broadway star'. The book bursts at the seams with research, from varnishes to price tags... and the scene's beauty, fetishisms and absurdities are all neatly captured. (METRO )

This novel deftly tracks the story of an antiheroine shimmying her way up the social ladder in the Nineties New York art scene. The chapters skip by and Martin's writing is shot through with an addictive dry wit. (SHORTLIST )

an extraordinarily insightful exploration of the New York art market, and just how money, greed and criminality infuse it to the core...you can't help but be completely beguiled by Martin's quiet authority. (DAILY MIRROR )

He writes prose like he plucks a banjo: pitch-perfect (INDEPENDENT ON SUNDAY )

Object clearly owes an inspirational debt to both The Great Gatsby and Breakfast at Tiffany's, proving that Martin's good taste in literature rivals his good taste in art. (THE SCOTSMAN )

The author himself is a longtime collector and is clearly at home with the egos, machinations and downright insanity of that world and he provides a pitch perfect backdrop...Steve Martin is a talented writer and his knowledge of the art world means this book has a great behind-the-scenes feel to it (SUNDAY EXPRESS )

Martin is a well known art collector himself and his insider knowledge of this world is wonderfully realised in the fine detailing throughout the book. Although an incredibly easy and enjoyable read it does have some darker and more universally resonant undertones...art is not considered a thing of beauty but a commodity bought by idiots and sold by unscrupulous brokers. Pop art, as the saying almost goes, will indeed eat itself. (TIME OUT )

Lacey Yeager uses everything at her disposal to advance from a junior post at Sotheby's to owning her art gallery in New York. A winning novel from actor turned novelist Steve Martin. (WOMAN & HOME )

A tale of glamour, subterfuge and modern art from comedian, actor and art collector Steve Martin...Using his insider knowledge, Martin paints the glittery surfaces of this elite world with panache, but also reveals the rot beneath as economies, personal morality and the value of contemporary art take a tumble into the dirt. (MARIE CLAIRE )

Martin's talent is for capturing the personalities and machinations that characterize the art world, which he does deftly... An Object of Beauty is clearly the work of a connoisseur (TLS )

Steve Martin engages the reader with knowledge (he's an avid art collector) and a dry wit. (CHOICE )

Martin's career as a novelist is going from strength to strength, and his new book, about a young woman making her way in the absurd New York art scene, is a well-observed joy. (HEAT )

An Object of Beauty is the tale of eager young thing Lacey Yeager who trades her way up from Sotheby's basement to a space of her own via some dodgy dealing,a rich collector as a lover and association with a rising star artist exquisitly named Pilot Mouse. It is an engaging story peppered with real world references... Martin has set out to examine the zeitgeist, and mores of the bourgoisie through the flawed protagonist, as did Wharton. (THE ART NEWSPAPER )

Book Description

An irresistible look at the glamour and subterfuge of New York's art world, from bestselling author and Hollywood star Steve Martin.

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Good but not great 2 Mar 2011
By J. Morris TOP 500 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Hardcover
Steve Martin's foray into writing has been met with mixed reviews and it's easy to see why. An Object of Beauty follows the life of Lacey Yeager, a strong and independent woman in the world of art. It details her meteoric rise from an intern managing stock at Sotheby's in New York to the owning of her own successful gallery. It's more of a commentary on the social circles of art collectors and dealers that Lacey travels in, but it's very, very art-heavy.

Every few pages, a print of the painting being described is included to educate us on classical & contemporary art and allow the reader to connect to the material. This is great as some of the paintings are true classics and I enjoyed reading about their history, however is because of this juxtaposition the story falls down. The hard facts about artists and their works clash with the flighty-story of Lacey and her whimsical relationships with men. It may sound like an effort to balance the serious side of the book with a lighter side, but it just felt like I was alternating pages between a high-society romance novel and an art history textbook.

An Object of Beauty is incredibly short, weighing in at 304 pages of wide-spaced, largely-dialogue-based paragraphs. Chapter breaks come at 3 or 4 page intervals (68 chapters in a 300 page book!) which creates large amounts of blank space at the ending of one chapter and beginning of the next - it all feels like it was designed to pad out a short story into a full novel. When this is considered in the context that 20 or so years pass during the story, it makes 300 pages seem very insignificant.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars OK read but the plot felt a bit pointless 8 Dec 2010
By Janie U VINE™ VOICE
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
This book is an OK read and would maybe be good on a plane where your options are limited. There is nothing in it which is likely to offend or put off anyone but there is also nothing that would make it an amazing read.
The technique used to tell the story is clever. The novel is written in the first person with the main protagonist being a friend of the narrator - he is telling her story.
Manhatton is used as a setting for the story and there are some interesting tales about the art world. Although it is fiction, the book is peppered with references to real art works, with prints even being shown in the text. This has the pleasing effect of blurring the line between fact and fiction.
I wouldn't rush to recommend this book.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Entertaining and Informative 24 Dec 2010
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
Steve Martin - yes, THAT Steve Martin - has produced a highly enjoyable read with this book about the Manhattan art world of the late 90s.

In a way, the book was highly reminiscent of Breakfast at Tiffany's by Capote - there is the same distance between the narrator and the protagonist, as well as the backdrop of the glamour of New York city.

A nice feature of the book is the inclusion of illustrations of the art in question, making the book somewhat informative as well as highly engaging.

I highly recommend this book. It was fun, interesting and well written.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars An Object d'Art 14 Mar 2011
By prisrob TOP 500 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Hardcover
'An Object of Beauty' tells the story of the best of times in the art market, the 1990's. Steve Martin is an aficionado of art, and his knowledge comes through loud and clear. He also inserts pictures of the art that is discussed,. and that, is the best of the best. Not only is there a story of art, but we are privy to a little history of the artist and a picture of that art. The story is told in flashback by the voices of the art dealers, and Lacey Yeager in particular and her friend, Daniel, a young man who is a writer in the art world.We are privy to the sexy Yeager. She is young and blonde and beautiful, and just ripe for the art world. Lacey is a cool, sometimes cold woman from Georgia who makes it big in the art world. Always big money, but never the millionaire she covets. Just enough, but not enough to play with the big boys. Sotheby's the art house where Lacey found her knowledge. Working from the basement up and with some nefarious schemes that we wonder about. He discusses artists that may not be well known, such as Milton Avery. Milton Avery, is discussed at length and we are wonder if the author is a fan. He tells us, Avery "was an isolated figure in American painting, not falling neatly into any category".

The last half of the novel perks up considerably. Lacey's values seem to change from that of someone who appreciates art to someone who wants to make the big bucks. As cold as she is in her sex life, I wonder if there was ever any love in her life. I am not sure that I empathized with any of the characters- the art world is full of the pretenders and the wannabes. To me, the art market is an uneasy environment. but it does have an appeal.
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3.0 out of 5 stars Better than Clouseau 18 Dec 2011
By Alan Hansen VINE™ VOICE
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
Steve Martin has made some lousy - but presumably lucrative - choices in his movie career, but every now and then reminds us why he was so funny from the late 70s to early 90s. Bowfinger and The Spanish Prisoner kind of balance out the ghastly Pink Panther and Cheaper by the Dozen franchises. His novel The Object of Beauty certainly leans towards the subtle wit of his better late acting work, but remains oddly insubstantial, like a New Yorker short story taken for a long walk until it's on the point of exhaustion. There are moments of amusement, but not enough. I'd still rather he did stuff like this than desecrate the corpse of Peter Sellers, though.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
3.0 out of 5 stars A NOVEL THAT DOES NOT FIT THE IMAGE OF STEVE MARTIN
I quite enjoyed this novel,though I found the connection between Steve Martin the actor,and Steve Martin the art expert and novelist quite hard to come to terms with. Read more
Published 18 months ago by bibliophile
3.0 out of 5 stars same again
Much like "Shopgirl" but a little less pervy. Short, reasonably sweet, and enjoyable. But slight. Would have fitted in nicely, in fact, to the hip urban novels of the 1980s.
Published 18 months ago by tiredoldtimer
2.0 out of 5 stars Not as good as other Steve Martin books
I am a big fan of Steve Martin and loved his other novels, The Pleasure of my Company (really funny) and Shopgirl (less funny but still interesting). Read more
Published 19 months ago by KateyB
1.0 out of 5 stars an object of beauty - STEVE MARTIN
Shallow, weak story, the next page happened as expected. Heroine - no depth, story feels rushed, title does not reflect contents of book. Read more
Published 19 months ago by m.atkinson
4.0 out of 5 stars Sort of Dickensian
I enjoyed reading this book. I interpreted it as a sort of Dickensian description of the contemporary art world. Read more
Published 21 months ago by Absent Minded Prof
4.0 out of 5 stars Art, money, ambition, wit - great stuff.
Steve Martin's good-natured comedies would no more clue you in to his being a fine novelist than they would suggest to you that he's an accomplished bluegrass banjo player. Read more
Published 21 months ago by Jason Mills
2.0 out of 5 stars I tried, but couldn't finish it
In fact, I struggled to get more than 30 pages through it. I like Steve Martin, I like (of sorts) Art; but this just was not for me. Read more
Published 22 months ago by Mr. Simon Paddon
4.0 out of 5 stars Compelling reading
This reads very easily at at the same time is a very insightful account of the artworld and market over the last twenty years or so. If you like art, you absolutely cannot miss it. Read more
Published on 30 May 2011 by VICKYM
4.0 out of 5 stars New York Story
It is difficult to talk about this book without talking about its author. I have enjoyed Mr Martin's movies, especially LA Story, Dead men don't wear plaid and The man with two... Read more
Published on 17 April 2011 by DeeJay
4.0 out of 5 stars Intriguing
Intriguing and savvy novel about the art world. Mainly set in sleek and wizzy New York and very far from the sedate politeness of the BBC's Antiques Roadshow. Read more
Published on 22 Feb 2011 by G. Wynne Jones
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