fiction
![]() The Violin Lover, Fredericton, Goose Lane Editions, 2006. Winner of the 2006 Helen and Stan Vine Canadian Jewish Book Award for Fiction. click on the cover to read a little background to the novel (better if you've already read it!!) alternatively, if you haven't read the book yet, click here to read an extract to buy the book, click The Violin Lover
Sample Reviews
"Like Margaret Atwood, Michael Ondaatje, Don Coles, Anne Michaels, Michael Redhill and a host of other Canadian writers, Susan Glickman has taken a turn from verse to fiction. An accomplished poet and non-fiction author, she manages the transition to her first novel, The Violin Lover, with assurance…As a first novel, The Violin Lover neither misses a beat nor strikes a false note." --Michael Greenstein, The National Post, March 26 2006 "Poet
Susan Glickman uses music as
both metaphor and plot device in her first novel, a moving, sparely
written
story of family, passion
--Lisa Fitterman, The
Gazette
(Montreal) July 8, 2006
In …The Violin Lover, Canadian poet Susan Glickman trains her clear eye upon the nature of, and conflicts between, art, domesticity and identity…Glickman's mastery and maturity are evident in The Violin Lover. Its final moments are as moving and inevitable as the flow of music toward its conclusion. Readers will be richly rewarded by the beauty and power of her artistry." --Dvoira Yanakovsy, The Globe and Mail, April 1, 2006
"Glickman is an elegant, vivid and imaginative writer. She is able to convincingly portray intelligent people talking about things that matter to them, even when their behaviour is not so intelligent. Her depictions of relationships between mothers and sons are especially resonant. Best of all, she gets the music right, both in the technical details and the way it infuses the spiritual lives of her characters." -- Pamela Margles, Whole Note (July 1-September 7, 2006), 49
"Poet Susan Glickman fashions this engaging tale around the true story of a black sheep great- great- uncle…Not only does Glickman meet the challenge of making this not entirely likable man come to complex life, her language expertly mirrors the rhythms of life and music. …Glickman's backdrop shows us the texture of Jewish life in London: the music, the politics, the growing Blackshirt menace, the realities of children and home. These endure after the love affair has faded to silence."
--Nancy
Wigston, Books in
Canada (summer
2006), 37
"Unfolding over a period of three years, while Hitler drives the world ever closer to war, The Violin Lover is impacted by the atmosphere, never overpowering but definitely underlining the actions of the characters. It resonates in the background, the tension of this gathering storm adding much to the tale. Interestingly, it's a story that ultimately reflects Ned's feelings about that perfect musical performance. When you read a good book, don't you also want to close that cover and be silent? To think about and savor it for a time, not even tempted to read another until the possibility of literary perfection again rears its head? Clever Glickman."
--Cherie
Thiessen, "Disparate
Chords," January Magazine,
Sept 6,
2006, http://www.janmag.com/
"Pure magic describes this debut novel by poet and literary critic Susan Glickman. I savoured every page, wanting to prolong my journey to 1930s London before the Second World War. Weaving the metaphors of music with her highly polished poetic prose, Glickman places the reader in a totally believable fictional space."
-- Sharon Abron
Drache, "Lyrical Love Story Set in London," Glebe Report (Ottawa) October 13, 2006, 39.
“Lyrical, original thoughts and visionary descriptions of instruments,
the ‘secret honey’ of sounds and the power of music, lift the novel into a
different dimension: these poetic insights raise the workings of the plot to unexpected
heights of mysterious beauty.” |