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Mohrbooks Literary Agency
Sebastian Ritscher
Original language
English
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THE SONG OF NAMES

Norman Lebrecht

Martin Simmonds' father tells him, "Never trust a musician when he speaks about love." The advice comes too late. Martin already loves Dovidl Rapoport, an eerily gifted Polish violin prodigy whose parents left him in the Simmonds's care before they perished in the Holocaust. For a time the two boys are closer than brothers. But on the day he is to make his official debut, Dovidl disappears. Only 40 years later does Martin get his first clue about what happened to him.
THE SONG OF NAMES is the story of two boys brought together on the eve of World War II. Martin is the son of successful musical talent agent Mortimer Simmonds. Dovidl is a nine-year-old violinist of extraordinary promise from Warsaw who arrives at Martin's house to study with the celebrated Carl Flesch. With Dovidl's family trapped in Poland, the two boys form a symbiotic relationship, so close that they hardly know where one persona begins and the other ends. Martin sees in Dovidl a brilliance that illuminates his existence. Dovidl sees Martin as a common-sense mediator with the plodding world - or does he?

On the eve of his long-awaited international debut, after being hyped by Mortimer Simmonds as the new Fritz Kreisler, Dovidl disappears. The family business is destroyed and Martin spends the next forty years searching for the missing part of himself, unable to come to terms with his feelings of abandonment and betrayal.

Then, at a provincial music competition, he hears a young boy play as only Dovidl could have. How did he learn that technique? The revelation sets him on the trail to an astounding act of self-discovery and renewal. Martin finally finds his lost friend, changed in ways that he could never have imagined.

Unraveling the complex strands of love, envy, and exaltation that bind artistic geniuses to their admirers, Norman Lebrecht has created a novel in the grand nineteenth-century tradition, bursting with ideas and feeling.

Norman Lebrecht is a highly regarded commentator on music, politics and culture for the BBC and the Evening Standard. He lives in London.
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Published 2023-05-30 by Headline Book Publishing

Book

Published 2023-10-12 by Headline Book Publishing

Comments

This is an interesting tale, Lebrecht recreates the atmosphere of war-time London through a child's eyes with vigour.

Any critic, especially one as ferocious as Norman Lebrecht, who risks putting his own head above the creative parapet needs barrel-loads of chutzpah. The temptation to aim a few slings and arrows at the thunderer just for the hell of it is almost irresistible. Sadly, his first novel, The Song of Names spoils the fun. It is too good to trash....It has a compelling humanity. The cynical symbiosis of the relationship between artist and agent is deliciously caught. The atmosphere of wartime and the aftermath is conjured with exceptional vividness. Musical influences and imagery run like a watermark through the prose. Having rounded the whole thing off with elan, Lebrecht leaves room for a final flourish, his concert encore.

This complex and often tragic story reads entertainingly...an unusually impressive first novel.

Filming has started for the film adaptation of the book, brought to fruition by the Canadian producer Robert Lantos and the director Francois Girard. The cast includes Tim Roth, Clive Owen and Catherine McCormack. Read more...

Delightful. . . . Reveals an author full of knowledge, invention and passion. . . . A lovely book.

US: Penguin

This novel was the winner of the Whitbread First Novel Award.

Much to enjoy in the author's sensitive understanding of music and musicians.