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Hardcover The Kreutzer Sonata Book

ISBN: 1559707445

ISBN13: 9781559707442

The Kreutzer Sonata

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

- Booksellers will be reminded of the recent success of The Emigrant (W. G. Sebald), Amsterdam (Ian McEwan), and Prague (Arthur Phillips)--beautifully crafted literary fiction with an international... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

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Sparse Yet Insightful

Dutch author, Margriet de Moor is the author of eight novels including The Duke of Egypt and Virtuoso, both of which now join The Kreutzer Sonata in English-language translations. She resides in Amsterdam. Her books are international bestsellers. Tolstoy's novella and Janacek's sonata both bear the same name as this book: Kreutzer. Margriet de Moor weaves an intricate tale based on the premise of the novella, the emotional connection that novella has with the music in Janacek's music, and a handful of finely crafted characters for her own story. A young musicologist, who remains unnamed throughout the book, is the narrator of this spiderweb of a story. When musicologist meets up with a renowned music critic by the name of Marius van Vlooten, their conversations carry the reader across the miles and years of their musical connection. The critic, blinded by his failed attempt to commit suicide over a failed relationship, and the musicologist travel to music festivals throughout the European cultural circuit. During their conversations en route to such events, the reader gains insight into the back story as well as the unfolding current story of van Vlooten's life. As the story unfolds, the reader is given glimpses into the sightless life of van Vlooten - a life that, by virtue of his blindness, has resulted in an increased ability to use other senses in the absence of sight. The Tolstoy novella focuses on a tragic tale of love, deception, and loss. When Janacek wrote his sonata for four stringed instruments, the notes played out the same emotions as Tolstoy's words. The conductor of the string quartet tells his musicians to "humanize" the notes. And so, de Moor humanizes the condition as well as the notes for her readers. The reader comes to realize that the characters in this book are influenced by what is seen and unseen alike...and by what only the heart can hear and interpret - the language of music. With the musicologist serving as his eyes, van Vlooten, who spent some ten or more years building a fortress against any future love interest, meets one of the members of the stringed quartet playing Janacek's sonata - Suzanna, the first violinist. Eventually, Suzanna and van Vlooten marry but the marriage is doomed by the ghosts of van Vlooten's past. He suspects that his wife is having an affair with another member of the quartet - as was the plot in the Tolstoy novella. From the first moment of suspicion, van Vlooten's life unravels in a tragic and sometimes unpredicatable way. Tolstoy, Janacek and de Moor all collide to create a sparse yet insightful study of the human condition in all of its fraility. Eventually, van Vlooten realizes that he and he alone has ruined his life. The web of uncertainty, scorned love, and bitterness combined with the inability to allow himself to love freely and unconditionally all work against him and his relationship with Suzanna. To this reader/writer, the story's end could easily be an ending to a sc
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