
Picture this: Imagine yourself in the late summer of 1937, in the South of France. A group of artists and free spirits have gathered for a picnic in a secluded glade, their laughter echoing through the trees. Dresses are loosened in the heat, shoes are cast aside, and a couple share a playful kiss. In that sun-dappled moment, Lee Miller lifts her camera and captures something timeless. This snapshot will come to define the magic and recklessness of youth. That image is where Thomasson begins her story.

From here, the book unfolds like a conversation under the stars. Thomasson introduces us to the circle of friends around that table: the daring photographer Lee Miller, the impossibly brilliant but complex Pablo Picasso, the Surrealist icons Man Ray and Dora Maar, the poet Paul Éluard and his wife Nusch, and others like the dancer Ady Fidelin and artist Eileen Agar. Some names you might recognize, others you might not, but by the time you finish the book, you feel as though you’ve walked beside them through sunlit fields and shadowed war rooms alike.
What makes A Vast Horizon so compelling is Thomasson’s gift for bringing these lives to the page through the art they made, the poems they wrote, the letters they exchanged and the photographs that survived. She doesn’t just recount facts; she invites you into their world, showing how art and friendship and love were their anchors even as the specter of war loomed ever closer.

As the years move on, the carefree days of that Mediterranean summer give way to the harsh realities of the Second World War. Plans shift, loyalties are tested, and the very notion of freedom changes as Europe descends into turmoil. What I loved most was how these real people, rebels in their own way, struggled to hold onto creativity and connection in a time that sought to tear everything apart.
In a way, this book feels like a bedtime story told around a fire: it is vivid, it is alive with colour, and it lingers in your thoughts long after you’ve finished reading. I found myself turning pages late into the night simply because Thomasson writes with that rare combination of intimacy and sweep. You can almost hear the laughter of that summer picnic, feel the tension of the war years, and sense the resilience in the friendships that endured.

And that makes me think about today. What does it mean to seek freedom and creativity when the world feels heavy with uncertainty? How do we hold onto our friendships, our art, and our passions in times of upheaval? These are questions that stayed with me, echoing long after I closed the book.
Anna Thomasson herself is no stranger to exploring such rich human stories. Based in London, she came to this project with a deep grounding in biography and an eye for the details that make history feel personal. Her first book was widely acclaimed, and A Vast Horizon confirms her gift for bringing complex lives into clear, compelling focus.

If you love books that feel like journeys, that make history feel like a conversation, then A Vast Horizon is one to savour. It isn't just about art or war or friendship. It’s about how those forces shape the best and most vulnerable parts of ourselves.
Questions that linger:
What would you hold onto if your world were changing around you?
How do friendship and creativity sustain us in uncertain times?
Is a "safe" life worth living if it’s built on a lie?
Which of these figures do you think carried the greatest burden, and why?
These are the thoughts I’m still carrying with me. And I think that’s the mark of a book that truly matters.

Hi Melody,
ReplyDeleteThe book you wrote about must be truly fascinating! I haven't heard of it, and unfortunately, I don't know if it's published in Polish and is in my library? I would love to read it. Today, we also live in dangerous times... The unpredictability of the mad criminal Putin and his henchmen, the idiot in North Korea, and cynical China are just a few examples.
Melody, I wish you a pleasant weekend!
Sounds really interesting. And your review is spectacular. :)
ReplyDeleteA experiência de Anna como biógrafa enriquece a construção da obra tornando-a atrativa.
ReplyDeleteBem interessante, Melody.
Um belo ano pra ti.
Solo con saber quien son los protagonistas ya hace interesante el libro y mas si se desarrolla en una época tan convulsa como durante la segunda guerra mundial.
ReplyDeleteSaludos.
Sembra interessante, grazie mille per la recensione
ReplyDeleteParece un buen libro. Gracias por la reseña. Te mando un beso.
ReplyDelete謝謝推介.
ReplyDeleteI would love to read this book. You have created a wonderful review. My eyes are not good any longer, I wonder if it is on audio? I don't know if you would be interested but I'm starting a new artist link up on my blog. You can check it out tomorrow. The question you posed, " What does it mean to seek freedom and creativity when the world feels heavy with uncertainty? How do we hold onto our friendships, our art, and our passions in times of upheaval?" Is one we can explore. Have a nice evening.
ReplyDeleteSeems like a book I would love, Melody.
ReplyDeletereconozco los nombres e incluso de unos de ellos (la fotógrafa lee miller) me he ocupado en un post en mi blog.
ReplyDeletesalvando las distancias, así como boccaccio juntó a un grupo de jóvenes fuera de una ciudad para evitar la peste, aquí, la autora junta a un grupo de artistas, cada uno en su propia especialidad a finales de la década del treinta del siglo pasado cuando ya se temía que otra conflagración mundial iba a estallar en cualquier momento.
en ese sentido es un libro que tiene mucha actualidad ya que mucha gente teme que estemos ad portas de otro conflicto bélico a nivel mundial aunque las bombas atómicas que poseen muchos disuadan de que esto vaya a ocurrir.
muchas gracias por la reseña, parece un buen libro a leer.