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Formats
Paperback Book Details
  • 04/2025
  • 9781647428709
  • 384 pages
  • $17.99
Joan Fernandez
Author
Saving Vincent: A Novel of Jo Van Gogh
Saving Vincent, A Novel of Jo van Gogh, traces the persistent efforts of Jo van Gogh-Bonger — Vincent's sister-in-law— and her work to save Vincent's paintings from obscurity. When Jo's husband, Theo, died six months after his brother, the young widow and her infant son inherited hundreds of virtually worthless works. Defying tradition to move back to her parents' home, she opened a boarding house to raise her son alone and to promote Vincent's work herself. It took nearly fifteen years of hard work for Jo to bring about Vincent's break through as a significant ultimately world-renowned artist. Jo had the courage to trust her inner conviction — despite setbacks from society and a misogynistic art elite — to develop a market. This fictional work is based on the true story of Jo's quest.
Reviews
Fernandez’s fictional retelling debut of Jo van Gogh-Bonger’s life vividly captures the challenges of a widowed woman in the early 20th century. When Theo, Jo’s husband, dies just six months after Vincent, Jo finds herself at a crossroads: retreat to her domineering father or raise her son alone and devote her energy to Theo's vision—that Vincent's talent receive its rightful recognition. Choosing the latter, Jo fiercely enters the male-dominated world of art dealing, determined to transform the hundreds of unsold paintings in her possession into her son’s inheritance and her brother-in-law’s enduring legacy.

Fernandez brings Jo's untold story to life with brilliant historical acuity. Relocating to Bussum, Jo defies societal expectations, running a guesthouse while relentlessly championing Vincent's work through art dealers and gallery curators. But her path is fraught with obstacles: dismissed as the dead art dealer's wife and unqualified in the world of art, Jo faces harsh critics who mock Vincent's paintings as lacking depth and atmosphere and attack his character as a "madman." Fernandez sketches the 20th century art world through the warring parties of dealers like Raulf—who purged the Montmartre Gallery of "avant-garde art" after Theo's death and is hellbent on sabotaging Jo’s efforts, convinced that modernism’s star is waning—and Vincent’s “spiritual battle against a materialistic age run by greedy moneymen,” who, in his eyes, consider art a political tool to flaunt French cultural dominance. For Vincent, art is personal—a soulful expression that Jo is resolute to share with the world.

Fernandez's portrayal of Jo as a strong, smart, and indomitable woman is both inspiring and empowering. She reveals that behind the global admiration of Van Gogh's art is an unsung heroine who believed in Vincent’s true skill and her husband’s vision, turning Vincent's near obscurity into a timeless legacy. Lovers of Van Gogh’s work will find this story intense, vibrant, and deeply moving.

Takeaway: Empowered story of the woman behind Vincent van Gogh's legacy.

Comparable Titles: Deborah Heiligman's Vincent and Theo, Irving Stone's Lust for Life.

Production grades
Cover: A
Design and typography: A-
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A-
Marketing copy: A

Formats
Paperback Book Details
  • 04/2025
  • 9781647428709
  • 384 pages
  • $17.99
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