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The Carel Fabritius’s Goldfinch from found superstardom thanks to Donna Tartt

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Art news • • Author: Natalya Kandaurova

Carel Fabritius’s painting The Goldfinch() left the Mauritshuis in The Hague on a "brief winter migratory". Now it is exhibited at the National Gallery of Scotland in Edinburgh until 18 December. The painting has never before been shown in Scotland,and has only been exhibited in the UK on a handful of occasions. When it was last shown outside the Netherlands at the Frick Collection in New York in ,it was seen by a record breaking , people.
The small canvas,measuring 34×23cm,is perhaps best known to a wider audience as the cover of the novel of the same designate by&

Finn Wolfhard on the Ambiguous Sexualities of his &#;Goldfinch&#; and &#;It&#; Characters

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[This story contains spoilers for The Goldfinch and It: Chapter Two]

As Finn Wolfhard grows up, so do his characters. Whether it’s running from dancing clowns and Demogorgons or ghostbusting in Jason Reitman’s Ghostbusters , the year-old actor is still having plenty of fun in the genre that launched his career. However, Wolfhard is finding new ways to challenge himself, hence the role of Boris Pavlikovsky, a Ukrainian émigré in John Crowley’s The Goldfinch.

Based on the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, The Goldfinch chronicles the childhood and adulthood of Theo Decker (Oakes Fegley, Ansel Elgort), who lost his mother in a terrorist strike at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Once Theo relocates to Las Vegas to live with his mostly deadbeat father (Luke Wilson), he meets Wolfhard’s Boris, and the two become inseparable as Boris’ wild ways rub off on Theo. Though the film faltered at the box office, it gave Wolfhard an opportunity to stretch his acting skills by perfecting an accent. And while the novel suggest

Der Distelfink

Oriana

Author 2 books3, followers

April 2,

So listen. Look. I am a READER, right? I mean, I interpret all the time, everywhere, every day, a guide a week. But most of the time the book I'm reading is a dull throb beneath my fingers, a gentle hum behind my eyes, a lovely way to spend a bit of time in between things as I meander through my life. You know? It's something I adore, but softly, passively, and often forgetfully—very nice while it's happening, but flitting away quickly after I'm on to the next.

And then sometimes there is a book that is more like a red hot fucking coal, a thrum nearly audible whenever I'm close to it, a magnetic pull that stops me doing anything else and zings me back so strongly that I just want to bury myself in its tinnitus at all times—five minutes in line a the bank, two minutes in the elevator, thirty seconds while my coffee date checks her email—gorging myself with sentences and paragraphs until the whole world recedes and shrivels into flat black-and-white nothing.

This, this, this is one of those books. It's a book that bracingly reaffirms my faith in literature, making me endlessly astonished by its dominance and poise and brillian

Guest Post: Harry Potter and &#;The Goldfinch&#;

Today&#;s Guest send is from Claudia in Germany.  Claudia has a Master of Arts in Linguistics and German Literature, whose thesis was titled (auf Deutsch) &#;The Art of Reading: About the Cognitive Foundations of Reading in light of its Historical Development.&#; She and I have corresponded on several topics and I begged her to write up her notes about the relationship of the Hogwarts Saga and the Pulitzer Prize winning novel, The Goldfinch. Enjoy!

Dear Professors and Readers of the &#;Hogwarts Professor&#;,

This spring I received &#;The Goldfinch&#;, the Pulitzer Price winning novel by Donna Tartt, as a birthday present. Hesitatingly I began to read because the book has got pages (in German; English nearly ; German title &#;Der Distelfink&#; = translation of the bird&#;s name).  And although I wanted to read the guide because Donna Tartt&#;s &#;The Secret History&#; was an unforgettable reading experience, I was not exactly looking forward to the story: I don&#;t like stories about adolescent teenagers, honestly, if they&#;re not about our favourite one.

And: I nearly didn&#;t make it to the end. I was constantly comparin

der goldfinch gay

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