In her signature style, Fiona Davis reaches into the past to find a part of New York history and uses it as the scaffolding for an impressively imagined work of fiction. The Masterpiece weaves together the stories of two women, Clara and Virginia, across decades and centered around one famous piece of architecture, Grand Central Terminal, and all the history within. Our story begins in 1928, a mere two years before The Great Depression when people were still able to feed their hobbies and their innate desire for art. Enter Clara Darden, one of the few female illustrators and art teachers at the Grand Central School of Art—a little known and secluded art hamlet hidden in the upper levels of the terminal itself.
The first time she did enter the hallowed space, stepping off the train from Arizona last September, she stopped and stared, her mouth open, until a man brushed past he, swearing under his breath at her inertia. The vastness of the main concourse, where sunshine beamed through the giant windows and bronze chandeliers glowed, left her gobsmacked. With its exhilarating mix of light, air and movement, the terminal was a perfect location for a school of art.
She checked each room, counting five studios in total, amazed at her find: a mummified art school at the top of Grand Central. The last room was some kind of storage area, filled with wooden crates stacked haphazardly on top of one another. The crate closest to her had been opened; a crowbar lay on the floor nearby. Inside, Virginia discovered course catalogs, accounting letters, and notebooks filled with names of students and tuition figures. A winter catalog from 1928 offered a snapshot of life right before the Depression, when a portrait painting class cost fourteen dollars a month.
Shuffling among the antique clutter, Virginia manages to find a canvas painting depicting a moving scene that stirs something within Virginia and motivates her to look deeper into the history of Grand Central. What she uncovers slowly unfurls as we travel back and forth between her story and Clara’s past until both narratives come together in a surprising and satisfying conclusion.

Am a HUGE Fiona Davis fan — had picked up this book and now it’s on top of the TBR pile thanks to this detailed, entrancing review…
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I enjoy her stories as well! Thank you for the kind words 😊
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