Renoir Girls: A Hidden History of Art, War & Betrayal

Catherine Ostler

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Book cover for Renoir Girls: A Hidden History of Art, War & Betrayal
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Book cover for Renoir Girls: A Hidden History of Art, War & Betrayal
Image for variant 9781668232484

Renoir Girls: A Hidden History of Art, War & Betrayal

Renoir Girls: A Hidden History of Art, War & Betrayal

Catherine Ostler

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Description

The true story of one of impressionist artist Pierre-Auguste Renoir's most famous paintings, and an astonishing exploration of the rise and fall of a prominent French Jewish family from the Belle epoque to World War II.

Paris, 1881. The artist Pierre-Auguste Renoir knocks on the door of a wealthy Jewish family's home in the 8th arrondissement, the grandest quarter of Paris. He has arrived to paint the portrait of the family's two youngest daughters. The parents, the Cahen d'Anvers, are bankers, collectors, philanthropists, and pillars of Parisian society. They go to balls, breed racehorses, and ride in the Bois de Boulogne with their aristocratic friends. But for the Jewish community, the undercurrents of Parisian sentiment are already moving in a sinister direction. The story of the Renoir girls will end in the duplicity and the horror of the Second World War. With an extraordinary cast of characters, from the girls themselves, their mother's lovers, a heroic British General; from the King of Spain to Dreyfus, Proust, and Maupassant--this is a story about one of the world's most famous pictures, The Pink and the Blue. But really it is a story about Paris--one that prefers to be hidden. With access to never-before-seen letters, diaries, and personal recollections--it is a tale of privilege, beauty, and betrayal almost lost in the shimmering memory of a vanished world.

About the Author

Catherine Ostler is an author and journalist who has been Editor-in-Chief of Tatler, the English Standard (London), the Evening Standard magazine (London), and Editor of The Times (London) Weekend. She has also written for a wide range of publications, including The Wall Street Journal, The Daily Telegraph (London), the Financial Times, and Vogue. She studied English at Oxford University. Her first book was the critically acclaimed The Duchess Countess: The Woman Who Scandalized Eighteenth-Century London.

Critical Reviews

"The Renoir Girls is much more than an engrossing family saga about lucky people brought low. Its real subject is antisemitism, which starts as a background whisper and becomes a terrifying roar. This makes it essential reading for our times, a terrible warning about how racial hatred can lie dormant for decades before reappearing with a vengeance in times of political and financial chill."
--Kathryn Hughes, The Times (UK), Book of the Week

"Profoundly moving . . . With consummate skill and impressive research, Ostler tells the story. Reading the early chapters, when the Cahen d'Anvers family were at the pinnacle of Belle Epoque high life, I felt I was inside an Impressionist painting, dazzled by color and fun."
--Ysenda Maxtone-Graham, Daily Mail, Book of the Week

"[A] story that is at once intimate and expansive, rooted in the particulars of a single family, yet reaching outward to encompass some of the defining events of modern European history. In the end, The Renoir Girls is less about a painting than about what lies beyond its frame: the passage of time, the shifting of identities, the sudden and often catastrophic turns of history."
--Guy Walters, Independent

"[An] evocative work of narrative history . . . Miss Ostler has scoured family papers to add rich and telling detail to the sweep of her story . . . As befits such an involving and wide-ranging family saga, she even keeps a big twist in reserve for the very end."
--Michael Prodger, Country Life

"The final reveal--which makes one gasp--only underlines the artifice of the world Ostler has portrayed, where almost limitless wealth, privilege, and familial connections proved in the end no match for the overwhelming evil of anti-Semitism."
--Ariane Bankes, Spectator

"This is a remarkable and haunting book, bringing the lives of the three young Jewish sisters, painted by Renoir in fin de siècle Paris, into extraordinary focus. It is a revelation."
--Edmund de Waal, author of The Hare with Amber Eyes

"[An] impressive biography. . . . A single painting foreshadows a tragic, expansive account of antisemitism and war."
--Kirkus

"The Renoir Girls is a dazzling achievement: heartbreaking, glamorous, elegiac, revelatory, and utterly gripping. It is simultaneously a portrait of Belle Époque Paris, the chronicle of a powerful French family in a world of palaces, estates and the late 19th-century high society of grand aristocrats and bankers, a story of great love, forbidden affairs and family secrets, a biography of Renoir and his artistic milieu, a history of France from Second Empire to World War Two, and the story of French Jews from the court of Napoleon III to the killing camps of the Holocaust--and at its heart are the extraordinary lives of three sisters and a famous painting. A tale with echoes of Proust and The Hare with Amber Eyes, it is deeply researched, beautifully written, delicious, haunting, and horribly timely."
--Simon Sebag Montefiore, author of The World: A Family History of Humanity

"The Renoir Girls is magnificent: a grand sweep of a book, an epic told through the lives of the Cahen d'Anvers, their triumphs and tragedies, their romances and passions. Leading the reader inside a glorious gilded world, Ostler introduces us to a fascinating set of outsiders, both the wealthy Jewish families and the artists. Her writing, truly beautiful and melodic, is a joy to read."
--Hallie Rubenhold, author of The Five and Story of a Murder

"With The Renoir Girls, Catherine Ostler brilliantly exposes the darkness and latent violence beneath the glamour of Belle Époque Paris--revealing how antisemitism, social fracture, and the approaching catastrophe of war quietly undermine the surface elegance of a well-known painting."
--Dame Hannah Rothschild DBE CBE

"Meticulously researched and beautifully written, this engrossing book takes you straight to the heart of Belle Époque France, a world of grace, wit, and elegance. No one could know, as they conducted their love affairs and enjoyed their waltzes, how close they were dancing to the seething pits of murderous racial hatred."
--Andrew Roberts, author of Churchill: Walking with Destiny

"An exquisite portrait of splendor, sacrifice, and suffering. What begins with a single Renoir painting of two young girls unfolds into an elegant, poignant sweep of 20th-century European history. Ostler's masterful prose and groundbreaking research create a book with the richness of a novel and the authority of deep scholarship."
--Natalie Livingstone, author of The Women of Rothschild: The Untold Story of the World's Most Famous Dynasty

"I adore Ostler's evocative and lyrical writing that takes us through pivotal, changing times in history--from the Belle Époque to the world wars--with revelations (and beautiful writing) on art, family, and scandal. Ostler's deeply researched, scholarly but entertaining book is underpinned by a revelatory secret that will leave you gripped to the end."
--Katy Hessel, author of The Story of Art Without Men

"Through the drama of a single painting, Catherine Ostler has brought together a compelling work of family biography, Belle Époque French culture, and history of art set against the terror of world war and generational poison of antisemitism. Drawing on new archival research and family testimony, this is both a rich, global history and an intense, personal chronicle all flowing from Renoir's sublime portrait."
--Dr. Tristram Hunt, Director of the Victoria and Albert Museum

"From Paris to London to São Paulo, The Renoir Girls is a spellbinding journey into the dark heart of Europe's twentieth century and into the sadness and secrets of one family in particular. With formidable research and beautiful prose, Catherine Ostler delights and devastates in equal measure. You will never look at these portraits the same way again."
--James McAuley, author of The House of Fragile Things

"An exceptionally profound and eye-opening book that educates us--in the most haunting and compelling way--about art, France, religion, class, gender, and how the world came to be modern. Like all the greatest books, this is a story of endurance, tragedy, kindness, and love. Hugely enjoyable, beautifully written, skillful, deep, and kind."
--Alain de Botton, author of The Course on Love

"The Renoir Girls is a helter-skelter ride from the glittering, high society whirl of Paris in the mid-nineteenth century to the bleak gates of Auschwitz and the Nazi death camps a century later. The connecting link is deftly provided by Renoir's vivid portrait of two privileged children, 'Pink and Blue', as they journey through time from the exclusive, golden world of Proust to the dark ruins of Hitler's Europe."
--Rick Stroud, author of I Am Not Afraid of Looking into the Rifles

Publishing Information

Publisher: Atria Books
Pub date: 2026-07-14
Length: 432 pages

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