The Incantation of Frida K.
Braverman’s imagined life of Frida Kahlo begins and ends within the mind of the painter, at 46, on her deathbed. Reflecting on people, places, and events in her past, Frida is defiant, bearing the wounds of her body and spirit with a stark pride. Through memory and hallucination, Frida talks of men, art, and philosophy. Though she loves Diego Rivera, she openly scorns his limited vision and his “vulgar and inconsequential murals.” In her bold, surprising, and vivid award-winning style, Bra
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Kate Braverman has once again enveloped us with her magical and incantatory prose poetry. This book uses the last day of Frida’s life to explode and explore human conciousness and continue Braverman’s fight for equality for women artists. This book has about as much to do with the real life of Frida K. as Blood Meridian has to do with the real life of Buffalo Bill. This is a book of distilled essence and a meditation by one great female artist on another. If you are looking for a biography, look elsewhere. If you are looking for a feast of the mind, a wild hallucinatory ride, and some of the finest poetic prose since Plath then this is your book. ‘Bravermaniacs’ don’t have to be told what awaits them. For the rest of us, perhaps it is time to take a break from the linear novel and return to the use of fiction to explore the inner world that films simply can’t deliver. I found the Incantation of Frida K. to be both beautiful and horrifying, an unforgetable experience and a book not to be missed by serious readers.
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This book has powers. If you are drawn to exquisite poetic imagery this book will reward you not only with the beauty and originality of it’s language but with the success with which it invokes the drama, passion, pain and perception of its subject, Frida Kahlo.Frida’s story, in Kate Braverman’s words, is a story of a human being who is fated to endure a life of severe and chronic physical and psychological damage, who is blessed and cursed with an extremely acute sensibility and the talent and drive to express it to the eyes and nerves of the world through her canvasses. Her work has been classified as Surrealist. She refused this label. She stated she was painting reality as she knew it. Morphine, Opium and Demoral were part of that reality and were what it took to keep physical pain down and her perceptions and her artistic production up. Medical and surgical treatments have come along way in the last 50 years. The book also explores Frida’s relationship with Diego Riviera, who was the centerpiece of her painful fate. He physically and psychologically abused her, humiliated her and used her originality and style to pioneer the corporate branding concept in marketing, while at the same time denigrating her vastly superior talent.(Who’s the footnote now, Diego?}.Kate Braverman has given us a Frida who can be seen , felt, admired, applauded and loved within and beyond the context of her paintings. Read the paintings, see the book.
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This novel combines all the beauty of a poem, and all the acumen of one artist to another. Braverman’s fictional rendering of Kahlo finally gives a materiality of the artist rather than the myth. For this alone, Braverman is singular in her audacity and vision.
Review by Ratmammy for The Incantation of Frida K.
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The Incantation of Frida K. by Kate BravermanHere is yet another telling of the fascinating life of Frida Kahol, done in an unusual way by author Kate Braverman. The story is told by Frida while she is in a drug-induced state as she lays on her deathbed. Because of her state of mind, the book seems to read like a hallucinatory dream, with spurts of reality mixed in.Frida tells her life story in bits and pieces, from the first day she meets her future lover and husband, artist and communist Diego Rivera, to her own exploits as a celebrated artist and fellow communist, and the accident that left her a cripple all her adult life. Since her memories are being told while in a drug-induced state, it is difficult to determine what is fiction and what is fact. I found this a highly unusual book and rank it among my top 20 books of 2002. It is definitely not the book to read for one that wants to know more about Frida, but it is more of a work of art. Kate Bravermen takes the reader into the mind of an eccentric artist, and it is a fascinating journey.
Review by Midwest Book Review for The Incantation of Frida K.
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The Incantation Of Frida K. by Kate Braverman is a work of sophisticated fiction that brings the reader along on an imaginary tour of the late Mexican artist Frida Kahlo’s life. A profound and vivid testimony of the years hard living and equally hard playing, as well as an inward journey at the moment of death, The Incantation Of Frida K. is an absorbing and engagingly imaginative read.