- Genre:fiction
- Sub-genre:Romance / Historical / General
- Language:English
- Series Title:The Life and Work of Alice Guy Blaché
- Series Number:1
- Pages:344
- Paperback ISBN:9781543909999
Book details
Overview
Winner of the Literary TItan Book Award gold medal.
A deeply evocative story inspired by real events: the love affair between two
unforgettable people—Gustave Eiffel, the builder of the Eiffel Tower, and Alice
Guy Blaché, the first female filmmaker, a silent film pioneer. Mademoiselle Alice steps out of the
shadows into the reader's mind as an endlessly intriguing and entirely relatable
young woman.
Told through Alice's eyes, we get to know her, her family, and Monsieur Eiffel.
Eiffel is not looking to fall in love—he is a widower who has everything—wit, wealth,
fame, and brilliance. He was a friend of Alice's father who died when she was
seventeen, and the story she tells of falling in love with him is funny and emotionally intimate. Alice and Eiffel forge an enduring romantic and intellectual bond.
But while she wants to marry him, he refuses because he is so much older than
she is. Out of her desire to have a family, she marries a handsome Englishman and
travels to the United States, where she works with D. W. Griffith and then opens
her own film studio. Some of her emotional experiences find expression in the
scenarios she writes for film. Her relationship with Monsieur Eiffel continues on
in her mind and leads to some surprising developments.
Mademoiselle Alice tells us much about women's lives during the silent film era
in France and the United States. Combining a biographer's knowledge of her
subject with the novelist's gift for narrative, Janelle Dietrick has crafted a novel
that will capture the interest of every reader.
Read moreDescription
Winner of the Literary TItan Book Award gold medal.
A deeply evocative story inspired by real events: the love affair between two
unforgettable people—Gustave Eiffel, the builder of the Eiffel Tower, and Alice
Guy Blaché, the first female filmmaker, a silent film pioneer. Mademoiselle Alice steps out of the
shadows into the reader's mind as an endlessly intriguing and entirely relatable
young woman.
Told through Alice's eyes, we get to know her, her family, and Monsieur Eiffel.
Eiffel is not looking to fall in love—he is a widower who has everything—wit, wealth,
fame, and brilliance. He was a friend of Alice's father who died when she was
seventeen, and the story she tells of falling in love with him is funny and
emotionally intimate.
Alice and Eiffel forge an enduring romantic and intellectual bond. But while she
wants to marry him, he refuses because he is so much older than she is. Out of her
desire to have a family, she marries a handsome Englishman and travels to the
United States, where she works with D. W. Griffith and then opens her own film
studio. Some of her emotional experiences find expression in the scenarios she
writes for film. Her relationship with Monsieur Eiffel continues on in her mind and
leads to some surprising developments.
Mademoiselle Alice tells us much about women's lives during the silent film era in
France and the United States. Combining a biographer's knowledge of her subject
with the novelist's gift for narrative, Janelle Dietrick has crafted a novel that will
capture the interest of every reader.
Read more