
I don’t tend to read the copy written on a book’s cover flap. Now I remember why. Having finished The Art of Falling, I flipped to the cover to read that Danielle McLaughlin’s debut novel “reveals profound truths about love, power, and the secrets that define us.” That’s just silly and pretentious. The novel does nothing of the kind. It’s a competent enough novel written by an author at the beginning of her career, who in all likelihood is embarrassed by such inflated claims.
The novel tells the story of a curator and her relationship with a famous artist’s surviving family. As she negotiates the acquisition of the artist’s studio, questions arise about who owns a celebrated sculpture. In the background, the curator faces domestic upheaval – a cheating husband, a truculent teenage daughter, and the arrival on the scene of a former lover. That sounds promising, doesn’t it? While there’s no denying McLaughlin’s ambition as she explores ideas about the permanence and ownership of artworks and notions of faithfulness and betrayal, the whole thing never comes together or fulfills its promise for the simple reason that it’s difficult to care for any of the characters or their particular stories.




/https://www.thestar.com/content/dam/thestar/entertainment/books/2020/01/02/this-is-happiness-by-niall-williams-has-emotional-acuity-and-boisterous-humour/this_is_happiness_hc.jpg)



