Genevra Or The History Of A Portrait


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"Genevra; Or, The History Of A Portrait By An American Lady A Resident Of Washington City" is a stunning fiction written by using G. G. Fairfield. The story is ready in opposition to the vibrant backdrop of Washington City and revolves on a strange portray created with the aid of an American girl named Genevra. The story follows the photograph because it travels through various fingers, every owner revealing a chunk of Genevra's cryptic beyond. As the painting adjustments palms, it serves as a catalyst for revealing secrets and unraveling the characters' intertwined lives. The novel delves into subject matters of love, betrayal, ambition, and atonement in opposition to the backdrop of political intrigue and society conventions in nineteenth-century Washington. Fairfield offers a effective photograph of the period thru brilliant characterizations and vividly unique descriptions, transporting readers to a realm of high society and hidden dreams. As the novel progresses, the portrait's importance grows, exposing Genevra's proper identity and the activities that impacted her existence. Finally, "Genevra" is a tale of mystery and romance, in which the electricity of art and the human spirit collide in surprising approaches, leaving an indelible impact on all people who come across it.




Genevra; or, the history of a portrait by an American lady. A resident of Washington City


Book Description

"Genevra; or, the history of a portrait by an American lady. A resident of Washington City" by G. G. Fairfield. Published by Good Press. Good Press publishes a wide range of titles that encompasses every genre. From well-known classics & literary fiction and non-fiction to forgotten−or yet undiscovered gems−of world literature, we issue the books that need to be read. Each Good Press edition has been meticulously edited and formatted to boost readability for all e-readers and devices. Our goal is to produce eBooks that are user-friendly and accessible to everyone in a high-quality digital format.




Genevra


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Bright Ideas


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THE STORY: How far would you go for your child? For Genevra and Joshua Bradley, the question is no longer hypothetical. Their three-year-old son, Mac, is next on the waiting list to get into the Bright Ideas Early Childhood Development Academy--and







Genevra's Money


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Engraved Gems of the Carolingian Empire


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Medieval Europe offers a pageant of almost incredible richness: King Arthur and his round table, demons and cathedrals, Charlemagne and his paladins. The Carolingian culture of the late eighth to late tenth centuries (in what is now France, Belgium, Germany, the Netherlands, Switzerland, and northern Italy) offers more than its fair share of achievements. This heavily illustrated study examines one revealing legacy of Charlemagne's heirs and his people--the Carolingian gems of rock crystal, jet, and agate engraved with complex figural scenes, which have never before been studied as a group. These objects have been largely ignored in the scholarship of medieval art, partly because of the difficulty of access. Genevra Kornbluth assembles for the first time all twenty surviving gems, from small seal matrices to the forty-one-figure "Susanna crystal" in London, along with information about lost works. The unique features of each gem are made visible in over 200 detailed black-and-white photographs, often highly magnified and produced using new techniques developed to record transparent engraving. Kornbluth fully analyzes the techniques of manufacture, style, chronology, iconography, and patronage of each gem and examines their social functions, the organization and status of the artisans who created them, and relations between media. The gems are presented as evidence of the rich diversity of the Carolingian culture, rather than as reflections of an artistic program dictated by the imperial courts; they are also seen to be essentially new creations, drawing on earlier visual traditions but adapting their sources to address contemporary concerns.