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Desperate Romantics: The Private Lives of the Pre-Raphaelites
 
 
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Desperate Romantics: The Private Lives of the Pre-Raphaelites [Paperback]

Franny Moyle
3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (20 customer reviews)
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Desperate Romantics: The Private Lives of the Pre-Raphaelites + Desperate Romantics [DVD] + Lizzie Siddal: The Tragedy of a Pre-Raphaelite Supermodel
Price For All Three: £30.68

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Product details

  • Paperback: 432 pages
  • Publisher: John Murray (14 July 2009)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1848540507
  • ISBN-13: 978-1848540507
  • Product Dimensions: 2.5 x 12.7 x 19.7 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (20 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 152,599 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Franny Moyle
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Product Description

Review

"A hectic tale, packed with sex and dark drama...not so much an extension but an explosion and an echo of today's celebrity culture"

(West End Extra, Gerald Isaaman )

'Desperate Romantics is a gripping read and far more than a historical biography. It's like reading a modern-day soap opera. Franny Moyle writes as if she'd been transported from 1848 to the present day to report on their fascinating lives',

(Now, Clare Nasir )

'Riveting . . . Moyle captures vividly the texture and colour of this vital world'

(Independent on Sunday )

'The jauntiness of her approach is a refreshing antidote to the incestuous, dreamlike claustrophobia of these interlocking lives.  Her book is powerful, absorbing and, well, rather jolly'

(Sunday Times )

'Read about the truth behind John and Effie Ruskin's unconsummated marriage . . . and a host of other seemingly respectable 'Blue Plaque' names who lived their lives at a pace that would leave Damien Hirst and Jake and Dinos Chapman breathless'

(The Resident )

'Moyle's book captures all the sex, madness and addiction, making modern-day sagas seem downright dull!'

(Glamour )

'This has been well-covered before but she retells it with exceptional vigour and with fine detail culled from original sources'

(Daily Express )

The book is packed with colourful illustrations and drawings, while the words are pretty darned colourful too'

(Birmingham Post )

'Moyle tells the story with great verve, and the forthcoming drama based on her book should be one to look out for'

(Choice )

'Solidly researched book . . . Desperate Romantics is a cleanly written and evocative work that concentrates not only on the PRB as a group, but as individual geniuses'

(Sunday Herald Magazine )

'The book is highly readable and admirably free of bias and prurience'

(Independent )

'Particularly impressive is the way Moyle returns to a key moment...at various points to consider it from different angles...it will remind you of how all those wild young men and marginal girls fitted together in a nexus of mutual need and exploitation...it's got television written all over it, and in a good way, too'

(Guardian )

'Look out for the major TV series which coincides with this book about the bad boys of the Victorian art world'

(Unite Magazine )

'This should be fascinating TV viewing ... a scandalous saga'

(Bookseller )

'This makes for a thoroughly absorbing book, well illustrated with pictures...excellent material...if the BBC2 drama, which is scheduled to follow in the summer, is as well researched and presented as the book, it will be unmissable' (Morning Star )

'It all bears retelling and Franny Moyle fleshes it out with some new material and shrewd surmises ... the book is well illustrated and researched, as well as crisply written' (Irish Times )

'The age of the Romantics is alive and well in this fascinating book that accompanies the BBC series of the same name'

(Tatler )

'For sheer, scabrous fun it is hard to imagine a better offering than Franny Moyle's Desperate Romantics ... an utterly gripping read' (Sunday Express )

'Very well researched . . . Moyle achieves an unusual level of empathy . . . the story is certainly inflammatory'

(Time Out )

'For sheer, scabrous fun it is hard to imagine a better offering than Franny Moyle's Desperate  Romantics ... an utterly gripping read'

(International Express )

'Vivacious book ... perfect material for a BBC2 drama tie-in this year ... all the elements for  notoriety ...and entertainment!'

(Lancashire Evening Post )

'Sir John Ure is absorbed by an account of the Pre-Raphaelites . . . Franny Moyle [is] a scholarly and highly entertaining chronicler of their unruly exploits' (Sir John Ure, Country Life )

'Drama, romance and Victorian morality aplenty'

(Wharf, Giles Broadbent )

Product Description

Their Bohemian lifestyle and intertwined love affairs shockingly broke 19th Century class barriers and bent the rules that governed the roles of the sexes. They became defined by love triangles, played out against the austere moral climate of Victorian England; they outraged their contemporaries with their loves, jealousies and betrayals, and they stunned society when their complex moral choices led to madness and suicide, or when their permissive experiments ended in addiction and death. The characters are huge and vivid and remain as compelling today as they were in their own time.

The influential critic, writer and artist John Ruskin was their father figure and his apostles included the painter Dante Gabriel Rossetti and the designer William Morris. They drew extraordinary women into their circle. In a move intended to raise eyebrows for its social audacity, they recruited the most ravishing models they could find from the gutters of Victorian slums.

The saga is brought to life through the vivid letters and diaries kept by the group and the accounts written by their contemporaries. These real-lie stories shed new light on the greatest nineteenth-century British art.


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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
31 of 34 people found the following review helpful
Bohemian Rhapsody 9 Feb 2009
By Gregory S. Buzwell TOP 500 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Hardcover
The Pre-Raphaelites were nothing if not colourful. Initially met with contempt John Everett Millais, Wlliam Holman Hunt and Dante Gabriel Rossetti gradually changed the Victorian world's perception of what made great art. In the process they achieved fame and acquired impressive sums of money but, as so often proves to be the case, success arrived hand-in-hand with notoriety, scandal and, in some cases, a slide into excess and untimely death. The story largely tells itself because the people involved are so much larger than life and the many notorious events so very colourful (Rossetti having the body of Lizzie Siddall exhumed so he could recover some manuscript poems he had placed in her coffin; or John Ruskin's deeply peculiar 'marriage' to the lovely Effie Gray and his later pursuit of the worryingly young Rose La Touche). Yet, even allowing for the spectacular nature of the personalities involved Franny Moyle does a terrific job in pushing the narrative along and providing excellent detail about the social context shaping the lives of the central players. In particular she's very good on the women in the lives of the artists: from the tragic Lizzie Siddall to the stunning Annie Miller, not forgetting the demure Georgiana Burne-Jones and the lovely Jane Morris, the tangled romantic inter-twinings of the artists and the women in their lives are all well explained. Moyle is also especially good on explaining the symbolism and the stories behind the paintings themselves. I must have made annual visits to Tate Britain to look at many of these pictures for the last dozen years or so and yet the author made me aware of numerous telling details I had somehow managed to miss.

What, sadly, lets the book down is the editing and proof-reading. Every couple of pages there's a silly typo of one sort or another - words are repeated, 'friends' becomes 'fiends' and 'chloral' becomes, rather strangely, 'choral' (how exactly, I wonder, would a choral overdose actually work?). One or two errors would be forgivable but here there are so many it does become rather distracting.

Still, quibbles about the editing aside, this is an excellent introduction to a fascinating art movement. Brilliant, dazzling, eccentric and emotionally absolutely all over the place the Pre-Raphaelites have found an author sympathetic and skilled enough to tell their story with suitable style and dash. Definitely recommended.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
Desperate Romantics 23 Sep 2009
Format:Paperback
IF you've recently seen the tv series Desperate Romantics and want to know a bit more about the Pre-Raphealite Brotherhood (PRB) then this is a good place to start. It's gripping, exciting and eminently readable. If anything, you'll find that the PRB were wilder and more outrageous in real life than anything which can be portrayed on film.
It traces the private lives (and less closely) the careers of the three main PRB members as seen in the programme (Dante Gabriel Rossetti, William Holman Hunt and John Everett Millais) and also includes other members who were not featured much or at all like Edward Burne-Jones, William Morris and William Rossetti. It also charts the rise and fall of the women in their lives (and there were many!) and who were just as interesting in their own right: Lizzie Siddall, Annie Miller, Fanny Cornforth, Ruth Herbert, Georgiana Burne-Jones etc.
John Ruskin is the lynchpin which holds the text together because as well as being an early promoter and patron of the group before they were really accepted my the establishment his life became painfully intwined with theirs.
Franny Moyle writes in an engagin style and I was gripped from the beginning. It's better than a novel!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
I came to read this book after my imagination was captured by the TV series of the same name. I was interested to read the facts behind the fictionalised drama I had been watching, and to learn more about the work of the PRB generally.

I found this book instantly engaging in style. Although not simplistic, the tone is light and pacy rather than academic. Moyle does not assume any pre-existing knowledge of art, artists, the historical or sociological context, and provides context as the book goes along, in very small doses. She covers a lot of ground, as the book follows numerous personalities, their work and influences, from youth to death, and all in a volume about the same size as your average novel. Ruskin and Rossetti are probably given most coverage, and the book does tend to emphasise the more "rock star" aspects of the PRB, though this isn't necessarily a bad thing as it is quite fascinating. Some of the paintings are discussed, in terms of the symbolism and motivation behind the choice of subject, and there are some colour plates, which are helpful to illustrate the points Moyle is making. No one aspect of the PRB is covered exhaustively, but this keeps the pace of the book moving, and also provides the reader with scope to follow up their own areas of interest afterwards should they choose to.

I would expect that if you are already an expert in the field then this book would probably not offer you any new insight. As far as I can see it is a drawing together of existing research and knowledge filtered and coloured, as with any biographical work, by the preferences and opinions of the writer.

I loved this book. I expected to enjoy reading about the individuals involved in the PRB, and the book delivered on that point. What I didn't expect was that it has made me look at art in a different way. My academic background is in literature, and though I have visited lots of galleries and enjoyed looking at paintings, I've never really felt that I understood art very well. The book opened my eyes to the idea of "reading" a painting much as I would read a poem. This probably sounds really obvious, but I'd never thought of it that way before, so I think reading this book will increase my general enjoyment of art in the future.

The only improvement to the book would have been more and larger colour plates, but I guess there would be a cost implication to that!
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Desperate Romantics
Subtitled as "The private lives of the Pre-Raphaelites", this follows the lives of a, changing, group of artists and writers. Read more
Published 4 months ago by S Riaz
Don't waste your money on this
At page 37 Moyle says Gabriele Rossetti (Dante's father) was born in Naples. Well, this is not true. Read more
Published 6 months ago by Ginger
Sex, Scandal and Art!
The Pre-Raphaelites were a group of artists including William Holman Hunt, John Ruskin and Dante Gabriel Rossetti (amongst many others). Read more
Published 8 months ago by The Reader
A brilliant introduction to the Pre-Raphaelites
I was drawn to this book after loving the series of the same name (and having Aidan Turner on the cover is no hardship either! Read more
Published 10 months ago by S. Pomfrett
Very good book
A very good book, very informative about the period and the lives of the artists. The series 'sort of' follows the book, OK, not really .. Read more
Published 16 months ago by Mr. A. Buckle
Pre Raphaelite recapitulation
This new book accompanying the series "Desperate Romantics" about the Pre Raphaelites covers much of the same ground as William Gaunt's "Pre Raphaelite Tragedy" (still available on... Read more
Published on 6 Jan 2010 by barbicandy
Cheeky Chappies are very charming even as a read
Its hard not to fall in love with so many of the pre raphaelite 'characters' that fill this book. It is a wonderful introduction to Dante , mad , and the many 'stunners' in the... Read more
Published on 22 Oct 2009 by Matthew White
Desperate Romantics: The Private Life of the Pre-Raphaelites
If - like me - you watched the recent BBC TV series "Desperate Romantics" and want to know what really happened then this book is definitely for you. Read more
Published on 18 Oct 2009 by H. Davenport
Less than engaging
If you're considering buying this book on the basis of having seen the television series I would urge against it. Read more
Published on 29 Sep 2009 by P. W. H. Bradley
Un-put-downable!
I bought this book used in great condition from amazon. I could not put it down!
If you love the work and stories of the PRBs then this is a must. Read more
Published on 25 Aug 2009 by J. Doyle
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