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A groundbreaking survey of the school of expressive, symbolic landscape painting that gave rise to American modernismâ newly revised and updated.

Produktbeschreibung
A groundbreaking survey of the school of expressive, symbolic landscape painting that gave rise to American modernismâ newly revised and updated.
Autorenporträt
David Adams Cleveland is a novelist and art historian whose latest novel, Reunions, was published in September 2025. His most recent art history book, A History of American Tonalism, won the Silver Medal in Art History in the Book of the Year Awards (2010) and Outstanding Academic Title (2011) from the American Library Association. The third edition and fourth printing from Abbeville Press (2025) has gone on to be one of the best-selling books in American art history and is now the standard reference in its field. His prior novel, Gods of Deception, was described by the WSJ's Walter Russell Mead as "an accomplished and compelling novel of enormous ambition . . . the author is a major American novelist whose ear for language, eye for both artistic and natural detail, cultural scholarship, understanding of human character, and feel for American social reality, makes him a national treasure." Gods of Deception was a 2022 Indies Book of the Year finalist for historical fiction. His third novel, Time's Betrayal, (starred review, Booklist) was awarded Best Historical Novel of 2017 by Reading the Past. His second novel, Love's Attraction, was praised by Booklist as "a family saga moving between Concord and Venice--a twisty, atmospheric tale, leisurely told, about love and creativity, grief and pain, family and identity." Fictionalcities.uk included Love's Attraction on its list of top novels for 2013. His first novel, With a Gemlike Flame, drew wide praise for its evocation of Venice and the hunt for a lost masterpiece by Raphael. David was a regular reviewer for ARTnews, and has written for The Magazine Antiques, the American Art Review, and Dance Magazine. For almost a decade, he served as Arts Editor at Voice of America. He and his wife split their time between the Catskills and Siesta Key.