SPOILER ALERT - The author never finds much information about Victorine Meurent, the model who posed as Olympia.
The strength of this book, for me, was the author's voice. She is a talented writer, and I would love see her try her hand at an historic novel. Instead, she inserts imaginary snippets of Victorine's life written in the first person throughout the text, which was disorienting for me since I kept losing track of whether or not I was reading historical information Lipton had dug up.
The facts, as they are, seem to be scanty, mostly lost during WWII.
Something I found odd about this whole book was that Lipton constantly reminds us that a lot of what was written about Victorine (by men, of course) was supposition, and filled with inaccuracies. But then she throws in her own fictional sections, which seems to me just as much an appropriation of the real person.
I gave it such a high star rating because of the excellent writing, and also because I love the concept of spotlighting a life in the arts as more than "just a model", since for all that we don't know, Victorine certainly was an artist in her own right. I do admire the author's effort to show her a more multifaceted, even if the missing art and paperwork made her search mostly futile.