Dear Faye's Reviews > Starry Nights

Starry Nights by Daisy Whitney
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UPDATE: You can now see some pictures of my stay in Montmartre on the blog, along with this review! Click here to check it out!



There were a lot of reasons why I really wanted to read Starry Nights.

La première raison:The setting is in France. I love France. I studied there for a while, stayed for a bit in Strasbourg, Paris, and Épernay, and spent time with a few foster families. My boyfriend is French. I love their champagne. You get the picture. I'm not the ultimate Francophile, but that country has a special place in my heart. C'est claire?

La deuxième raison: J'adore les arts! I absolutely love art. The time I spent walking inside Musée du Louvre was one of the best 3 hours of my life. Art coming to life sounds pretty awesome, if you ask me, so this book really took the word "excitement" to a whole different level.

Starry Nights therefore had the perfect recipe. I was absolutely ready to devour this book and love every minute and every page, ready for it to give me that precious nostalgia of my time in France - all that art, history, and l'amour... but alas! It was not meant to be. In the end, I only felt disappointment that left an overwhelming bitter taste in my mouth.

First of all, it's set in France. In Paris. Paris, while not exactly my favorite city in the world, is still a magical place that's very distinct from other cities; it has something that sets it apart from others. Be it la tour Eiffel, or the lack of high-rise buildings, or that coffee shop Paul that seems to be everywhere, whatever. The thing is... Paris is different. So why the hell wasn't it described enough? You can't just throw in the picture of Eiffel tower on the cover and expect us to just imagine the place automatically. Throughout the book, I was waiting for the details of the place, but there were almost none. Paris wasn't represented enough, wasn't illustrated enough. I couldn't picture anything. It didn't give the City of Love justice.

Sure, it's not a travel guide. I'm not expecting this book to give me a vivid, bright picture of what Paris looks like, but DUDE. What's the point of putting the characters and the plot in a different setting and not describe it at least in moderate detail, not give enough information with regards to what it looks like? I was expecting this book to take me back there, to give me that French vibe, but honestly, with the way the novel turned out, it felt like it could've taken place anywhere. It threw the names Musée d'Orsay and Musée du Louvre around, but lol, it felt like it could've been any other Museum. It didn't feel special at all.

Like for example, the place Montmartre was thrown. They were supposed to meet some people there, and the only description I've gotten was the fact there was a steep hill with lots of streets. LOL!!! Really? REALLY? I stayed in Montmartre for a few days and I can describe it better than what was given in less than a minute. There's Moulin Rouge, there are at least two metros (there are probably more though), there's like a street full of sex shops, there's a steep hill with a famous restaurant that was in a Hollywood movie once, on top of the hill is Le Sacré Cœur, and there's a sort of bazaar nearby full of artists that would sell their works from €30-€200. And oh, there are a LOT of shady kids waiting by the metro entrances that would ask you to donate money for the blind and would NOT leave you the fuck alone 'til you do so (unless you're stealthy and sneaky).

Anyway, before I get sidetracked, what I mean to say is the setting was very underwhelming. The city, the museums, it didn't give me that magical feeling, not even the feeling of nostalgia, or that feeling we're somewhere different from the usual American town/city, and this aspect therefore turned out very disappointing. It definitely had so much potential, but in the end, it felt like being given a hamburger with no meat (I'm hungry, okay >_<).

One of the things that made this story interesting at first was its paranormal aspect. For Julien, the things or people in the paintings he's surrounded with come alive at night. They go out of their bronze or silver frames and manifest themselves in the flesh, totally giving us that Night at the Museum vibes. Unfortunately, this aspect felt underwhelming. Once again, I'm not expecting an art guide or anything like that, but Paris is the city of art and history. Centuries ago, art thrived here. It lived here. And until now, countless paintings still hang the walls of different museums all around the country, including paintings from the 13th century and those even older than that. You'd think more pieces of art would be featured, even in passing, but it just fell short. This is another reason why Musée d'Orsay and Musée du Louvre felt lacking - not many paintings were presented, at least the paintings that make Musée d'Orsay THE Musée d'Orsay or the Louvre THE Louvre. Get what I mean? Thus, it felt like it was any other museum.

In short, it did not feel French. It did not feel like it was in France. And therefore, I didn't even connect to the characters because everything else felt so inadequate and inefficient. I wish I could care more, care about Julien's powers coming to light and his falling in love with one of the paintings, but I couldn't. I didn't. And besides, insta-love? Really? :/ I never understood this one... you hang out for a couple of hours and you love each other already? Sure, it must have happened in real life several times, but it's often exaggerated in fiction and I can't get its appeal.

There were a lot of things about the plot that bugged me, too. Dude, Musée d'Orsay and Musée du Louvre are really bigshots when it comes to the preservation of artifacts and history. These institutions are well-guarded, and I'm pretty sure there are CCTV cameras all over the place, so how the frack did Julien sneak in and get away with it every night? It must have been explained later, and I may have missed it, but it was still unbelievable how he stayed a little before midnight, touched the paintings, and sneaked out at 2 or 1 o clock in the morning each and every time. Uhh... sure...

It also really bugged me how his best friend easily accepted Julien's "paranormal powers" like they were just talking about the weather. The build-up was lacking, there wasn't enough tension to build excitement... the list could go on and on. And that ending? SUPER CONVENIENT. Ugh, it still pisses me off whenever I think about it. I didn't even feel sad because I kind of knew things would become all right without much trouble, and I felt crushed when my hunch was right.

Perhaps I am not this book's audience. Perhaps it would appeal more to those who are looking for a fluffy, romantic read, those who don't overanalyze and those who don't care for much exposition. If you're that kind of person, you may enjoy this. Despite my complaints, I did think it was a decent story, but it just wasn't for me.

Final Verdict: 2.5 / 5
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Reading Progress

July 12, 2013 – Started Reading
July 12, 2013 – Shelved
July 12, 2013 –
page 12
4.29% "Disappointed so far... it's set in Paris, but there's not much details about it. It's supposed to be the city of Love! And Musée d'Orsay! I've been there and it's fantastic and there's no description about it! There aren't even French words even though the characters are French. It doesn't feel like it's set in France at all... >_< This upsets me a little because I love that country."
July 12, 2013 –
page 14
5.0% "Why throw the place Montmarte when there's not even a decent description of the place? I could describe it in a heartbeat. There are sex shops, there's the moulin rouge, there are at least two metros nearby, it's full of kids who'd ask you to donate money for the blind and who'd NOT leave you alone, there's a restaurant nearby featured in a hollywood movie... like, come on."
July 12, 2013 –
page 43
15.36% "Totally getting Night at the Museum vibes."
July 14, 2013 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-17 of 17 (17 new)

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message 1: by Tandie (new) - added it

Tandie I've never been to France, but I stubbornly insisted on taking French (my mom wanted me to take German) for 4 years in middle school. I thought that I was pretty good in 4th year until our teacher had us watch Gigi and some French TV commercials. They spoke so fast! Couldn't understand a word. I still understand a lot of the written language & love it. You might enjoy Villette by one of the Bronte sisters if you're ever in the mood for historical fiction. It was peppered with French & I remember thinking it was romantic.


message 2: by Tandie (new) - added it

Tandie Kate Morton throws French stuff into her novels too. Pyrenees, etc. I've only read two of her books & don't think they're quite my thing. I do love the name Anatole though!


Dear Faye Ooooh, thanks! I'd love to read a historical fiction that feels gives an authentic french vibes. I appreciate the recommendation!

I know what you mean! I've studied quite hard for 2 years, then went to France, and WHOA! Everytime people talked, I'd just stare at them with an eyebrow raised. Hahaha! I can still remember some of them trying to talk to me slowly so I understand better... sigh... :))


message 4: by Khanh, first of her name, mother of bunnies (last edited Jul 15, 2013 08:22AM) (new)

Khanh, first of her name, mother of bunnies Je peux à peine lire Le Petit Prince sans un dictionnaire et j'ai pris 4 ans de français.


Dear Faye Ah bon?! Haha! Moi, ce n'était pas facile quand j'ai essayé de lire ce livre... peut-être une autre fois à l'avenir...


Khanh, first of her name, mother of bunnies Il était très seul dans ma classe de français en école. Nous avions seulement 14 étudiants qui ont pris françaises sur plus de 500. Les plus a pris espagnol.


Dear Faye J'ai pris la langue espagnole pour un semestre à l'université. J'aime bien cette langue mais à mon avis la langue française est plus beau à entendre (et plus facile aussi! :D )


Khanh, first of her name, mother of bunnies Tell me you ate some macarons or canelés when you went to Paris ;_; Omg so yummy.


Dear Faye HAHAHA noooo. I'm not a fan of macarons, to be honest. But I ate a lot of foie gras!!! :)) THOSE ARE HEAVEN =))


Khanh, first of her name, mother of bunnies My entire mouth is composed of sweet tooth (teeth?). It's a good thing macarons are so damned expensive...it's like $1.50 USD for one tiny 1.5 inch macaron here. Probably more so in Paris where everything's in Euros. Damn exchange rates.


Dear Faye Everything's so expensive in France. Seriously. That's why I didn't do any shopping at all. I remember, one of my friends who went to France with me? She bought this jacket for €80 from H/M. THEN she went to Spain and saw the same jacket for fricking €20!!! WOW o_O


Khanh, first of her name, mother of bunnies I feel so bad whenever I read about the prices in Europe. I was reading a food blog and they mentioned a burger combo from Shake Shack was 15 pounds and I was like WHAT? 15 POUNDS?! THAT'S LIKE $35-40 FOR A BURGER, A DRINK, AND SOME FRIES. Geez...


message 13: by Dear Faye (last edited Jul 15, 2013 11:38AM) (new) - rated it 2 stars

Dear Faye Hahaha... that's why when I was there, I had lunch and dinner at Subway as much as possible... I mean, it's just a sandwich BUT at least it saved me a lot of euros... And to think my dad only wanted to give me €250 for allowance in my 7-week stay there. He was like, "Why do you need more? There are Chinese restaurants in France that have €4 meals!" I was like WTF!! If you pinpoint me to a restaurant in France, ANY restaurant, that serves €4 meals, you deserve a laurel cause that's kind of impossible. I went to a Chinese restaurant in Strasbourg (was having rice withdrawals) and had to pay more than €30. I doubt there's anything of quality that's below €4.00 in France =)) no, impossible!


message 14: by Ellis (new)

Ellis I can't believe they botched the Musée d'Orsay and Montmartre. I don't mind so much about the Louvre because I feel like it's as overused as the Eiffel Tower when it comes to Parisian clichés, but not using the full potential of Musée d'Orsay is a missed chance imo. To me, the Louvre is quite overpowering and I think it takes three full days before you've seen everything displayed there, but d'Orsay feels more intimate and private, especially in combination with Gare d'Orsay. Maybe it was because I visited d'Orsay at night that I feel this way, but seriously, if the interesting part of the book takes place at night, there really is no excuse.

Oh and disregarding all that is Montmartre is maybe even more of a fail. All the little shops and street artists are so characteristic of Mediterranean/Southern Europe that I just can't believe they kept the descriptions so plain and resorted to name-dropping. Disappointment.


Dear Faye Exactly, Ellis. You've said it all, just in a classier way than my rant ;p I couldn't really forgive how the Louvre was downplayed like that... the book pretty much just told us one or two Greek sculptures, the Mona Lisa (and how the narrator thought it was overrated because it's so small not as appealing), and maybe one or two others, and that's it. Like seriously... the inverted pyramid wasn't even mentioned... ORZ Maybe I'm being too harsh, but these museums are HUGE and influential museums. It deserves more than that, imo. But more than that, the Montmartre part pissed me off a LOT. It's more than just a couple of streets and alleyways. I didn't like that place very much, but it was still more than that.

I get the effort to be original, but like any other worldbuilding, it would pay to be more descriptive of the place and make the reader feel they are there, at that same place. I guess the romance factor was more important here than anything else.


message 16: by Ellis (new)

Ellis Man, the only thing more generic than featuring the Mona Lisa is saying how overrated and ugly it is. And a big WTF to the not-mentioning of the pyramid. See, but even if the romance is the main focus, d'Orsay (both Gare and Musée) would have been PERFECT, especially at night. I get that it's hard with foreign places, and probably even worse when they're so historically loaded as Paris, but it's just a huge turn-off for me. Like all the Dutch blond girls on bikes in The Fault in Our Stars. It doesn't get more clichéd than that.


Dear Faye IKR :| It's cool to be original, but it's better to be able to back it up...


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