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Beethoven's Tenth

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Beethoven's Tenth

Contributors:

By (Author) Richard Kluger

ISBN:

9781947856776

Publisher:

Rare Bird Books

Imprint:

Rare Bird Books

Publication Date:

12th November 2019

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Genre:
Fiction/Non-fiction:

Fiction

Dewey:

813.54

Prizes:

Winner of Pulitzer Prize in Nonfiction 1997 (United States)

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

400

Description

From the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Ashes to Ashes

When the assistant manager of a hardware store in rural New Jersey shows up at the offices of Cubbage & Wakeham, an elite New York auction house, with a worn musical manuscript he hopes to sell for a small (or perhaps hefty) fortune, he is greeted with subdued snickersand not surprisingly. The title page of the document reads, William Tell: A Dramatic Symphony and is signed Ludwig van Beethoven. The bearer of the composition claims he recently came upon it in an old attic trunk while cleaning out his lately deceased grandfathers home in Zurich; several accompanying documents suggest the work was written there during the summer of 1814.

Since virtually all lovers of classical musicand many others who cant tell Stravinsky from Springsteenknow that Beethoven wrote nine sublime symphonies, and so evidence of a new-found tenth one by the supreme master of that musical form sets off an instant international uproar. Is the seemingly miraculous discovery the genuine article or an ingenious hoax

To solve the tantalizing puzzle before placing the manuscript on the auction block at risk of becoming a global laughingstock, Cubbage & Wakehams management organizes a team of intensely skeptical investigators, among them the worlds top Beethoven scholars and forensic experts, all of them out to prove the find a fraud. But as evidence to the contrary begins to pile up, tensions rise among the corps of authenticators, the financial stakes soar as would-be exploiters of the symphony gather, the governments of five nations seek to claim the work as a national treasure, and the mystery artfully spun by novelist Richard Kluger deepens by the day.

Among the beguiling questions that demand answers:
The mountain of archival documentation on Beethovens life and works is silent about his activities and whereabouts in the summer of 1814, but why would he have gone to Zurich then and written a symphony in tribute to, of all people, Swizterlands great folk hero
Why are the form and structure of the Tell symphonyeach movement contains a number of vocal interludes seamlessly blended with the instrumental passagesso different from all the other Beethoven symphonies
And why, if he had produced such a monumental work, would Beethoven have abandoned it Did he think it below his incomparably high standard of artistry Was it stolen from him Or did he fear pressing political considerations back in Vienna, where he had long resided, that could have endangered his career if the new work were to be publicly performed

The answersand a cast of feisty characters with conflicting stakes in the questmake Beethovens Tenth a deftly twisty and challenging detective novel, enriched by the prodigious research of author Kluger, a Pulitzer Prize-winning social historian.

Reviews

"This brilliantly researched novel will have scholars checking and re-checking what they thought they knew about Beethoven and his music, and mystery lovers delighting in the deftness of the plotting."
Classical Voice North America

"The climax makes for quite a crescendo, no easy feat for a novel whose theme is the tenuous boundary between great art and artful forgery, genius and fraud."
Houston Chronicle

"...this seven-course banquet of musical legend and coldhearted fraud."
Kirkus Reviews

For any who love Ludwig von Beethovens music, this novel is a must for its biography. For everyone else, its a great mystery story set against a background of actual history.
New York Journal of Books

Imaginative and informative, Beethovens Tenth makes for a fine read for both music lovers and fans of creative sleuthing.
Leonard Slatkin, Music Director of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, formerly Director of the Otchestre National de Lyon

A wonderful mysteryKluger succeeds admirably in both making the possibility of a tenth Beethoven symphony seem probable and undermining it throughout the authentication process undertaken by those planning to profit from it. A true tour de forcereadable, clever, erudite, and with a tantalizing ending.
Robert P. Morgan, Professor Emeritus of Music, Yale University, and author of Twentieth-Century Music: A History of Musical Style in Modern Europe and America

I must admit that Richard Klugers enterprise sounded a bit preposterous to me, but the way he handles all the musicological objections is very deft. He has certainly done his homework, musically speakingthe information Kluger dishes out about Beethoven himself rings true; nary a false note here. His writing is compelling to read, and its a lot of fun to be swept along by his smart and savvy characters."
Benjamin Simon, Music Director, San Francisco Chamber Orchestra

This wonderful yarn is a page turner with all the ingredients of the most intelligent and entertaining mysteriesengaging characters, plot twists varied locales, behind-the-scenes glimpses of the auction business, and lessons in music history, forensics, and the law. I loved it.
Susan Forscher Weiss, Professor of Musicology, The Peabody Conservatory, Johns Hopkins University and coeditor of I Concentrate on You: A Cole Porter Companion

Praise for Indelible Ink
[Kluger] brings...vivid storytelling built on exacting research, a knack for animating the context and an exquisite sense of balance that honors this countrys essential press freedom without romanticizing its champions.
Bill Keller, The New York Times Book Review

Celebrates the power of free expression.a comprehensive tribute to Zengers legal battle against censorship and reprisal.
Starred Review, Publishers Weekly

Event by compelling event, readers follow Zenger through the drama that eventually landed him in jail on libel chargesbefore a liberty-loving jury freed him with a 1735 verdict signaling a clear American commitment to the unfettered reporting that can check abuse of power. The much-needed prologue to todays headlines.
Starred Review, Booklist

Kluger raises important questions still resonating today.This thought-provoking account deserves to be read by everyone.
Starred Review, Library Journal

Enlightening and frightening. A book of American history for all, but lawyers and journalists will especially appreciate it.
Kirkus Reviews

Praise for Seizing Destiny
A detailed and compelling portrait. . . . It will force you to think about how America was made, and why.
The Boston Globe

Comprehensive and sweeping. . . . Fascinating. . . . Kluger is a skilled and passionate storyteller.
Chicago Tribune

Epic. . . . Brilliant. . . . Kluger limns colorful pen portraits of heroes and knaves both familiar and forgotten.
The Plain Dealer

A well-crafted and readable narrative of this often sordid, sometimes forgotten side of the American past.
The Washington Post Book World

One of the most important books published in our American times. . . . A major accomplishment.
Philadelphia Inquirer

Extraordinary. . . . An outstanding piece of legal and social history.
Washington Post

A thought-provoking work that should become part of the standard literature on race relations.
The New York Times Book Review

The definitive account, to date, of the struggle for black equality in America. . . . A monumental accomplishment.
The Nation

This huge, fascinating book . . . classic in its clarity and dimensions . . . should become part of our nations scriptures."
Chicago Sun-Times

A brilliant and powerful book.
Bob Herbert, The New York Times

A gripping story . . . epic history.
Los Angeles Times

A remarkable act of scholarship. . . . A book about values. . . . Its reader should be prepared to be moved."
The Atlantic Monthly

A noble study, written in the grand manner.
Geoffrey Wolff, Newsday

A masterful storyteller. . . . Kluger finds heroes all along the way. . . . Embellished with captivating anecdotes . . . [and] engrossing character vignettes.
St. Louis Post-Dispatch

An exciting story of an American happening as important as the Revolution itself. . . . Superb narrative history.
Kansas City Star

Author Bio

Richard Kluger, a native of Paterson, N.J., and Princeton graduate, grew up in Manhattan, where he worked for The Wall Street Journal, the (pre-Murdoch) New York Post, and the New York Herald Tribune, on which he served as the last literary editor. Entering book-publishing, he be-came executive editor of Simon and Schuster, editor-in-chief of Atheneum, and publisher of his own imprint, Charterhouse Books, before turning to writing books. Simple Justice, his acclaimed account of the Supreme Courts 1954 landmark Brown decision outlawing school segregation, and The Paper: The Life and Death of the New York Herald Tribune, both finalists for the National Book Award in history, were followed by Ashes to Ashes, an anatomy of the cigarette industry, awarded the Pulitzer Prize for general nonfiction. His most recent book was Indelible Ink, about the birth of Americas free press. Kluger is the author of six previous novels, among them Members of the Tribe and The Sheriff of Nottingham. He and his wife Phyllis have two sons and six grandsons and live near San Francisco.

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