A Woman with No Clothes On

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A Woman With No Clothes On
Cover art to the first edition of "A Woman With No Clothes On" by V.R. Main
First edition cover art
Author V.R. Main
Country France
Language English
Genre Historical fiction
Published London: Delancey, 2008[1]
Pages 335
ISBN 9780953911974
OCLC 280369069

A Woman With No Clothes On (2008) is V R Main's debut novel. Set in 19th century Paris, Main tells the story of 18-year-old Victorine Meurent, the painter Edouard Manet and their shared longing for the ultimate painting. The novel won the Trafalgar Squared Prize,[2] and was shortlisted for The People's Book Prize.[3] It was published by Delancey Press.[4]

Plot summary

The aristocratic Manet and the working-class Victorine Meurent narrate A Woman With No Clothes On. A chance meeting between the two leads to an intense relationship of painting and sexual tension. Manet creates a scandal when he exhibits Le déjeuner sur l'herbe and Olympia in which the naked model is a young Victorine. While critics and the general public dismiss the works, and label Victorine a common prostitute, she is determined to make her mark in the art world as a painter in her own right. Her bitter struggle to succeed is punctuated by the exchanges between Manet and his friend Baudelaire on the matter of modernism.

Critical response

A Woman With No Clothes On was the winner of the Trafalgar Squared Prize for Work in Progress (2008). It was described by the chair of judges, Wendy Robertson as "outstanding. A powerful novel. The writing is original, literary, intense and well-observed".[5]

The author of Manet, Lesley Stevenson praised Main for "rescu[ing] Victorine from her invisibility in the Parisian art world of the nineteenth century".[5]

The novel received press attention in The Guardian[6] and The Times.[7] The Socialist Worker carried an article on the novel's attention to issues of gender and social class.[8]

It received a mixed response on websites with user-generated reviews, such as online retailer Amazon.com[9] and feminist blog The F-Word.[10] Some readers have remarked on its flowing prose and exuberant characters. Others believe it is too intelligent for its own good and have remarked on the various traits often associated with debut novels.

Notes

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  6. Main, V R: The Guardian, G2, pages 16-17. 03/10/2008
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  8. Cookson, Matthew: Socialist Worker, page 11. 22/11/2008
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External links