![]() ![]() This would be a great classroom book, for exactly this reason! You can discuss artists and meaning in art alongside the novel. ![]() After the novel described certain art pieces, which it did really well, I’d look them up so I could see what the character was seeing. This is a middle grade novel, but I found myself trying to analyze the art pieces along with the main character. ![]() The excess of the 1920s, a mysterious household, and clues in paintings are all I needed to make me scramble for this book. The few paintings left are trying to tell her something! Martha must figure out what is going on in the household and if Rose is really crazy or if she, like the women in her paintings, is trying to get a message across. When she stumbles into the nearly empty gallery where hundreds of the world’s foremost paintings once hung she finds her first clues. ![]() Sewell runs a newspaper and is the epitome of a well-made man, but Martha thinks something else may be going on beneath the surface. Martha has heard the stories about crazy Rose Sewell who used to be a well-known, art collecting adventurer, but has taken a turn for the worse and now won’t leave her room. The roaring ‘20s don’t feel so fun for Martha, who has to start working as a maid for the wealthy Sewell family on the Upper East Side of New York City. ![]()
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