Enjoyed the acclaimed movie "The Monuments Men" à la George Clooney-Matt Damon? Well, consider The Last Masterpiece the other half of that story.
Meet Eva Brunner, a German photographer, whose father works for the Nazis, overseeing the storage of (looted) art treasures stored deep in the Austrian salt mines to “save the art from being stolen by the Allies.”
Across the ocean, Josie Evans is working as a secretary at the Yale Gallery in Connecticut when she enlists in the Women’s Army Corps (WAC).
Both women are soon called to Italy to contribute to the war effort.
In a dual 1943 storyline, most of The Last Masterpiece is set in Florence and the surrounding Tuscan countryside, although some chapters do take place in Rome and Venice.
Eva is helping to photograph and catalog Italy’s most precious artworks that are in need of protection and safeguarding from the Americans who will steal the centuries-old treasures. She is assured that they will be returned to their original owners after the war is won. The reality: Hitler wants the artwork for his Führermuseum.
Meanwhile, the WAC trains Josie as a stenographer and sends her to the European theater where she is assigned to work with the Monuments Men to protect Europe’s most important artistic and cultural treasures.
Author Laura Morelli, an art historian who holds a PhD in Art History from Yale University, includes details about paintings, sculptures, and churches that magically bring the artwork to life on the page.
Morelli also gives us a glimpse inside the WAC, which allowed women to serve overseas and "free a man to fight.”
Over 150,000 American women served during World War II. Initially, the women primarily worked in four fields: cooking, clerical, transport, and medical. Later that was greatly expanded and women were assigned as cryptographers, radio operators, metal workers, parachute riggers, aerial photograph and map analysts, and translators.
Art aficionados and fans of historical fiction will devour this beautifully written book that masterfully highlights how priceless artifacts were looted and protected during WWII.