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Music and war, war and music--these are the twin motifs around
which Bradford Morrow, recipient of the Academy Award in Fiction
from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, has composed his
magnum opus, The Prague Sonata, a novel more than a dozen years in
the making.In the early days of the new millennium, pages of a worn
and weathered original sonata manuscript--the gift of a Czech
immigrant living out her final days in Queens--come into the hands
of Meta Taverner, a young musicologist whose concert piano career
was cut short by an injury. To Meta's eye, it appears to be an
authentic eighteenth-century work; to her discerning ear, the music
rendered there is commanding, hauntingly beautiful, clearly the
undiscovered composition of a master. But there is no indication of
who the composer might be. The gift comes with the request that
Meta attempt to find the manuscript's true owner--a Prague friend
the old woman has not heard from since the Second World War forced
them apart--and to make the three-part sonata whole again. Leaving
New York behind for the land of Dvorak and Kafka, Meta sets out on
an unforgettable search to locate the remaining movements of the
sonata and uncover a story that has influenced the course of many
lives, even as it becomes clear that she isn't the only one after
the music's secrets. Magisterially evoking decades of Prague's
tragic and triumphant history, from the First World War through the
soaring days of the Velvet Revolution, and moving from postwar
London to the heartland of immigrant America, The Prague Sonata is
both epic and intimate, evoking the ways in which individual notes
of love and sacrifice become part of the celebratory symphony of
life.
The rare book world is stunned when a reclusive collector, Adam
Diehl, is found on the floor of his Montauk home: hands severed,
surrounded by valuable inscribed books and original manuscripts
that have been vandalised beyond repair. Adam's sister, Meghan, and
her lover, Will - a convicted if unrepentant literary forger -
struggle to come to terms with the seemingly incomprehensible
murder. But when Will begins receiving threatening handwritten
letters, seemingly penned by long-dead authors, but really from
someone who knows secrets about Adam's death and Will's past, he
understands his own life is also on the line - and attempts to
forge a new beginning for himself and Meg. In The Forgers, Bradford
Morrow reveals the passion that drives collectors to the
razor-sharp edge of morality, brilliantly confronting the hubris
and mortal danger of rewriting history with a fraudulent pen.
When a scream shatters the summer night outside their country
house, reformed literary forger Will and his wife Meghan find their
daughter Maisie shaken and bloodied, holding a parcel her attacker
demanded she present to her father. Inside is a literary rarity the
likes of which few have ever handled, and a letter laying out
impossible demands regarding its future. After twenty years of
living life on the straight and narrow, Will finds himself drawn
back to forgery, ensnared in a plot to counterfeit the rarest book
in American literature: Edgar Allan Poe's first publication,
Tamerlane. Facing threats to his life and family, coerced by his
former nemesis and fellow forger Henry Slader, Will must rely on
the artistic skills of his other daughter Nicole to help create a
flawless forgery of this 1827 publication regarded as the Holy
Grail of American letters. Part mystery, part case study of the
shadowy side of the book trade, and part homage to the writer who
invented the detective tale, The Forger's Daughter portrays the
world of literary forgery as diabolically clever, genuinely
dangerous and inescapable, it would seem, to those who have ever
embraced it.
A brilliant allegory that traces the life of a young woman whose
sanity teeters on the edge as she tries to hold together her
troubled family.
Since childhood, Grace Brush has suffered episodic migraines. With
them come hallucinatory visions, which reveal buried memories,
leading her inexorably on the path to discovering secrets that
could send her family's business empire into ruin. As Grace grows
into adulthood, her quest for personal freedom collides with the
mysteries of her past, making of her story an almanac of the
perplexing nature of truth itself. Bradford Morrow maps the
geography of a family's tragedy and one woman's redemption with
astounding psychological insight, grace, and nuance.
Birth is not inevitable. Life certainly isn't. The sole
inevitability of existence, the only sure consequence of being
alive, is death. In these eloquent and surprising essays, twenty
writers face this fact, among them Geoff Dyer, who describes the
ghost bikes memorializing those who die in biking accidents;
Jonathan Safran Foer, proposing a new way of punctuating dialogue
in the face of a family history of heart attacks and decimation by
the Holocaust; Mark Doty, whose reflections on the art-porn movie
Bijou lead to a meditation on the intersection of sex and death
epitomized by the AIDS epidemic; and Joyce Carol Oates, who writes
about the loss of her husband and faces her own mortality. Other
contributors include Annie Dillard, Diane Ackerman, Peter Straub,
and Brenda Hillman.
Rexroth, More Classics Revisited. the second volume of Rexroth's
Classics essays.
When a scream shatters the summer night outside their country
house, reformed literary forger Will and his wife Meghan find their
daughter Maisie shaken and bloodied, holding a parcel her attacker
demanded she present to her father. Inside is a literary rarity the
likes of which few have ever handled, and a letter laying out
impossible demands regarding its future. After twenty years of
living life on the straight and narrow, Will finds himself drawn
back to forgery, ensnared in a plot to counterfeit the rarest book
in American literature: Edgar Allan Poe's first publication,
Tamerlane. Facing threats to his life and family, coerced by his
former nemesis and fellow forger Henry Slader, Will must rely on
the artistic skills of his other daughter Nicole to help create a
flawless forgery of this 1827 publication regarded as the Holy
Grail of American letters. Part mystery, part case study of the
shadowy side of the book trade, and part homage to the writer who
invented the detective tale, The Forger's Daughter portrays the
world of literary forgery as diabolically clever, genuinely
dangerous and inescapable, it would seem, to those who have ever
embraced it.
Pages of a weathered original sonata manuscript - the gift of a
Czech immigrant living in Queens - come into the hands of Meta
Taverner, a young musicologist whose concert piano career was cut
short by an injury. The gift comes with the request that Meta find
the manuscript's true owner - a Prague friend the old woman has not
heard from since the Second World War forced them apart - and to
make the three-part sonata whole again. Leaving New York behind for
the land of Dvorak and Kafka, Meta sets out on an unforgettable
search to locate the remaining movements of the sonata and uncover
a story that has influenced the course of many lives, even as it
becomes clear that she isn't the only one seeking the music's
secrets.
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