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Cover of An Unfinished Score

An Unfinished Score

โœ Scribed by Elise Blackwell


Publisher
Unbridled Books
Year
2010
Tongue
English
Weight
142 KB
Category
Fiction

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โœฆ Synopsis


From Publishers Weekly

Blackwell's melodramatic fourth novel dwells on the odd circumstances that befall an unhappily married concert violist. Suzanne learns of the death of Alex Elling, an orchestral conductor and her lover, as she fixes a meal for her stoic husband, Ben, manipulative best friend, Petra, and her young deaf daughter, Adele. Struggling to remain composed, Suzanne later finds solace in her memories and music, though it's difficult to sympathize with her suffering; with so many musicians crowding the narrative, the story sags under the weight of passages filled with musical history and discussions between musicians in Suzanne's quartet. Suzanne continues to keep her love affair a secret, but when Alex's widow, Olivia, begins to call her home with cryptic messages, she fears she could be exposed. Unable to resist the tie to her lover, Suzanne visits Olivia and discovers he had been composing a score for her. In the stilted confrontation that follows, Olivia blackmails Suzanne into completing the score. Though Blackwell (_The Unnatural History of Cypress Parish_) manages a few twists, the frequently overwrought writing is a big turn-off. (Apr.)
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Review

An Unfinished Score is not a novel to get lost in. It is a tough novel, well-written, with major and minor rhythms coursing through it to carry the plot. It is broad and narrow at the same time. It is an exploration of grief, the history of music, being an artist, the concept of hearing, and the emotional life of a woman torn between her every day and a fantasy world. The novel quickly establishes its rhythm, starting from the first two lines She hears the words on the radio. It is the radio that announces her lover s death. At times stark, at times labyrinthine, Blackwell s prose works like a symphony some lines seem purposefully disharmonic, as if to add to the uncomfortable, yet familiar, struggle that the protagonist, Suzanne, goes through over the course of the book. By the end of the first chapter, it is more than apparent that the world this novel inhabits is not typical. Suzanne and her husband, Ben, share a home with Suzanne s best friend, Petra, and Petra s young daughter, Adele. Adele is deaf, and Suzanne, Petra, and Ben are all musicians (viola, violin, and cello, respectively). By the end of the first scene of the novel, after Suzanne learns of her lover s death, and the quartet share a relatively uneventful dinner, the reader can cut the tension within their household with a knife. An Unfinished Score begins slowly, exploring the terrain of Suzanne s grief-stricken mind, as she processes the death of her lover, Alex. Alex, a well-known conductor with whom Suzanne has been having an affair for four years, dominates Suzanne s mind and motivation for much of the novel. She holds close, perhaps too close, her memories of him, which in turn impairs her ability to see and her judgment. ... The first section of the book delves deeply into her psyche, moving nonlinearly through Suzanne s life....The second section opens with Suzanne meeting Alex s widow, Olivia, a well-bred and formidable character with revenge to enact on the woman who almost stole her husband. From here, the story becomes a vortex, pulling the reader in, sometimes moving at great speed and disorienting the reader, other times moving carefully over the landscape of creativity, love, heartbreak, loss, and ultimately coming to a crescendo of truth. Though Suzanne dominates the story, the other characters are well-drawn. Petra, an old-fashioned Swedish beauty provides comic relief, and a subtle edge to the story. She feels like she cannot raise Adele alone, and because of this, distances herself from her daughter, leaving Suzanne to stand in as the mother figure. Adele s quiet presence, and the looming possibility of her receiving cochlear implants, constantly evokes the concept of what hearing is. Her frustration at not being able to hear the music her mother and Suzanne play is artfully rendered. ... As for Ben, his presence is more felt than known, and could be likened to an absence as well. He is both there, and not there. The music theme of the novel certainly lends to its success, but at some points, it also seems to hold it back. Petra s endless viola jokes, Suzanne s reliving of each concert hall and concert she sat through with Alex, the histories of composers woven throughout these details sometimes distract from the actual story. A reader with no concept of orchestration, composition, or music theory might find themselves confused by the references. An Unfinished Score is an emotional novel. It is a book that asks for sympathy and contemplation. Exploring the complexity of classical music, the lives that create and perform it, and nothing less complicated than the inner workings of the human heart, the book is ultimately an orchestra of its own, beautifully composed and richly textured. --Newpages.com reviewed by Sara C. Rauch

Library : Romance
Formats : EPUB
ISBN : 9781609530396


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โœ Elise Blackwell ๐Ÿ“‚ Fiction ๐Ÿ“… 2010 ๐Ÿ› Unbridled Books ๐ŸŒ English โš– 266 KB

EDITORIAL REVIEW: As she prepares dinner for her husband and their extended family, Suzanne hears on the radio that a jetliner has crashed and her lover is dead. Alex Elling was a renowned orchestra conductor. Suzanne is a concert violist, long unsatisfied with her marriage to a composer whose

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โœ Elise Blackwell ๐Ÿ“‚ Fiction ๐Ÿ“… 2010 ๐Ÿ› Unbridled Books ๐ŸŒ English โš– 142 KB

### From Publishers Weekly Blackwell's melodramatic fourth novel dwells on the odd circumstances that befall an unhappily married concert violist. Suzanne learns of the death of Alex Elling, an orchestral conductor and her lover, as she fixes a meal for her stoic husband, Ben, manipulative best fri