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Chamber Music (1993)

Chamber Music (1993)

Book Info

Rating
3.69 of 5 Votes: 3
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ISBN
0393309452 (ISBN13: 9780393309454)
Language
English
Publisher
w. w. norton & company

About book Chamber Music (1993)

Caroline McClaren has been asked to give permanent record to the life of the fictional famous composer, and her long-deceased husband, Robert McClaren. Instead she decides ".... to write this account because, long as my life has been, it has given me no opportunity before this to say what I wish to put down here. Perhaps the time was not right to do it before.... For the representation of truth, old age is a freeing agent. No one should write of her life until all the witnesses and acquaintances, family and lovers, are dead. In addition it helps to outlive the mode of one's time until it has changed beyond recognition.... I write this, then, because I am freed by my survival into extreme old age [90] and because I write in the air of freer times. Whether this air is entirely salutary,whether the old must of chests, of closets, bell jars, and horsehair sofas is not a better climate for the storage of the private life, I do not know. But I tire very quickly these days and must speak openly, for once. I am now free. Extraordinary for me, and for one of my time, I intend to put down extraordinary truths."She was born in 1877 and would have recorded this account in the liberated late 1960s. And when she says survival, she is 100% correct. She has no father and leaves her mother in her late teens for marriage. A marriage that is without spousal passion and perhaps ever more tragic, her husband eventually withdraws entirely from her and is absorbed into his music, to the point of hardly speaking and needing total silence in their home. After she cares for him and he dies from what she learns, in its late stages, to be syphilis (thankfully, this is rare today, because it's devestating) she finds true love with the live-in nurse hired to care for her husband. There is much more tragedy, including fire and the great influenza after WWI. Caroline's story is tinged with sadness, and there's lots of unanswered questions, but she is not angry. She looks back with acceptance of its travails, appreciation for having found love, and some regret. Written in 1979, this fictional memoir is a literary social commentary on the century - how it began and how it changed. I highly recommend it.

My sister and I like to sit together to knit and watch medical shows or detective shows. When we guess the malady or the "perp," we gleefully congratulate each other.So one reason for my liking this book is that I very early made a medical diagnosis which proved to be correct. Congratulations, Dr. Styrsky!Another reason to like it is that this edition has a back-cover blurb by Barbara Pym, an author by now long deceased, whose work I love.And in addition to these personal sidelights, the book itself has a pleasant narrative voice with just enough description to seem like the autobiographical letter it purports to be. It held my interest.But now that I've set it aside--***SPOILER ALERT***I find that it boils down to yet another historical fiction whose narrator is surprised to find that she is in The Love That Dare Not Speak Its Name which is nevertheless perfection. Perfection.

Do You like book Chamber Music (1993)?

This is a sad, melancholy, and beautiful story about a woman named named Caroline, who lived most of her life alone. Caroline's father died when she was young, leaving a bereft mother who spent all of her time in mourning for her lost love. When Caroline met a young man in Boston, an aspiring American composer and respected conductor of symphonies, she looked forward to a life of love...They moved to Germany to their mother's house, where Caroline learned that mother and son had shared the same oversized canopied bed before they were married. In time, Caroline learned that her husband had an affair with another male musician. When Caroline and Robert moved back to Boston, and then to a farm in Saratoga, New York, Caroline devoted her life to Robert's public image, living "quietly" alone, for fear of disturbing her husband's creativity. They lived together, sleeping in the very same oversized canopied bed, yet Caroline remained very much alone. Robert contracted syphilis. A young woman named Anna came to be his aide and caretaker. Caroline and Anna became close friends. "The deep emotional freeze in which I had lived for so long, the ice age of my heart, would take a long time to melt, even beside the glowing flesh and warm heart of Anna Baehr." Robert died in his oversized canopy bed. "I mourned my wasted life in Robert's service, I grieved for his long absence from my conscious life, and mine, I think, from his." Anna and Caroline became lovers, residing in the very same bed. Until Anna's death, Caroline had finally found a partner to love, sharing each others physical and emotional needs. An exquisite "memoir!"
—Marcy

Caroline is ninety and looks back on her life, especially her married life with a world famous music composer. Very matter of fact and written starkly the emotional feel of Caroline's feelings come through very strongly without the gushing sentiment.Robert is a clever man but with many eccentricities that the naive Caroline as a young woman cannot see and does not understand till very much later. She adopts an attitude of servitude to him, giving in to his needs, his orders and most importantly his way of life. Everything seems subject to this.Caroline goes from a sheltered childhood to this life as a wife - a wife more in name than in anything else. Her passionate feelings only surface with the finding of a companion who comes in as a nurse when Robert is dying and this relationship is the only bright spark in her life. Caroline comes to life during this phase of her life story and the contrast of this short period as against her previous life seems so bright and vivid as against the dullness of all that goes before.A bit slow at the beginning this is a story you have to persevere at, the rewards of reading this is right at the end.
—Mystica

Aged 90, at the end of a long and often turbulent life, Caroline Maclaren decides to tell her life story, the story of her marriage to a famous musician, her loneliness within that marriage, the artists’ colony that she founds, and her ultimate fulfilment in a new relationship. It’s a straightforward narrative told in a straightforward way, and none the worse for that. It’s a realistic portrayal of a life and a marriage, more so as it’s based on the real life American composer Edward MacDowell and his wife Marian. Grumbach tells us however that the details of their lives are conjecture or invention and that the book is indeed a work of fiction. Nevertheless real people and events feature in the book and that gives it an added authenticity. I thoroughly enjoyed this compelling and often moving novel and am delighted to have discovered Doris Grumbach, a writer I’d never heard of before.
—Mandy

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