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The Kreutzer Sonata (2001)

di Margriet de Moor

UtentiRecensioniPopolaritàMedia votiCitazioni
1256221,041 (2.94)5
With an "astute sense of musical form and a wonderful sense of passion" (New York Times Book Review), master storyteller Margriet de Moor, one of Europe's foremost novelists, once again brings us a richly imagined and highly original tale of passion and jealousy. The unnamed narrator, a young musicologist, meets and befriends the famous blind music critic Marius van Vlooten. Their first encounter is on an airplane en route to a master class in Bordeaux, where the narrator introduces Marius to Suzanna, the pretty first violinist of a string quartet there to perform Janácek's Kreutzer Sonata. From this chance meeting, a passionate love affair soon develops between Marius and Suzanna. They become engaged and marry. A series of subsequent conversations between Marius and the narrator reveals the truth behind Marius's blindness: when he was a young student, he had fallen madly in love with a girl who spurned him. Despairing, he tried to commit suicide, but succeeded only in blinding himself. Now, ten years later, Marius is prey to another terrible dilemma: he loves Suzanna desperately, but, strongly suspecting she has a lover, becomes insanely jealous. His suspicions and his past draw him--and the reader--into a dramatic and tense Hitchcockian vertigo, where the tragedy plays itself out. This subtly constructed novel evokes powerful emotions through what the characters see and don't see, but mostly through what they hear--the language of music. Skyhorse Publishing, as well as our Arcade, Yucca, and Good Books imprints, are proud to publish a broad range of books for readers interested in fiction--novels, novellas, political and medical thrillers, comedy, satire, historical fiction, romance, erotic and love stories, mystery, classic literature, folklore and mythology, literary classics including Shakespeare, Dumas, Wilde, Cather, and much more. While not every title we publish becomes a New York Times bestseller or a national bestseller, we are committed to books on subjects that are sometimes overlooked and to authors whose work might not otherwise find a home.… (altro)
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A boring short novel. ( )
  edwinbcn | Aug 1, 2023 |
This short novel riffs off Tolstoy's story of the same title, giving us a modern-day story of music and jealousy with a rather different sort of ending from Tolstoy's. As in Tolstoy, the narrative frame is given by the narrator meeting the husband on a journey: in this case, though, they meet on a succession of plane journeys to music events over the course of a number of years.

Marius van Vlooten is a music critic, blind as a result of a suicide attempt at university when his girlfriend ran off to Venezuela with another man. The narrator first meets him when they are on their way to a music summer school in Bordeaux, and there introduces Marius to his student friend Suzanne, now first violinist in a string quartet that is working on Janáček's "Kreutzer Sonata" Quartet. They obviously hit it off, because next time they meet, years later at Schiphol, it turns out that Marius and Suzanne have been married for some time, but their marriage is in trouble, because Marius suspects Suzanne of deceiving him with the viola-player in her quartet...

Of course, de Moor isn't quite as concerned as Tolstoy with big general principles about sex and marriage; she has time to develop the relationship between music — Janáček in particular — and real life, and look into what it must be like for Marius to go through life knowing that everyone else can see and he can't, and to feed us some interesting little observations along the way about air travel, the musical world, and so on. I loved her little sketch of Dutch musical life in the sixties: the socially-repressed but musically experimental students at the Royal Conservatorium versus the unfortunate men of the Amsterdam University music department who had to spend all their time plotting revolutions and went in constant fear of sexual harassment from their women's-libber colleagues. No doubt grossly unfair, but fun!

An enjoyable little love story with an engaging musical theme. ( )
  thorold | Feb 20, 2020 |
In vliegtuigen en wachtend op de volgende vlucht ontmoet de verteller Marius van Vlooten, muziekcriticus, die vanwege een verloren liefde geprobeerd heeft zich van het leven te beroven. Daardoor is hij blind. Tijdens een masterclass ontmoet hij een violiste die in een kwartet speelt dat o.m. de Kreutzersonate van Janácek speelt. Een sonate, zoals sommigen zeggen, die over liefde en dood gaat. Marius en de violiste trouwen, krijgen een kind, en zij zet intussen haar muziekcarrière voort. Marius wordt echter steeds jaloerser, ook al is daar niet echt aanleiding voor. Zo zelfs, dat hij een moordplan beraamt. Dat plan kan hij op het allerlaatste moment niet uitvoeren. Zij vraagt echtscheiding aan. Tot zover weet de verteller hoe het is verlopen. Zestien jaar later leest hij een rouwadvertentie voor de violiste, met daarin de namen van Marius en drie kinderen. Het lijkt dus allemaal anders te zijn gegaan dan de verteller had gedacht.
Dit boek is een soort reactie op "Die Kreutzersonate" van Tolstoj.
  wannabook08 | Jul 5, 2016 |
Leos Janacek componeerde in 1923 zijn Kreutzersonata. Hij liet zich hierbij inspireren op het bekende werk met zelfde titel van Tolstoi, waarin (te kort geschetst) een man jaloers is op de (vermeende) liefdesaffaire van zijn vrouw en haar wil vermoorden. In het verhaal van Tolstoi komt de negende vioolsonate van Beethoven aan bod, een sonate van 1803 oorspronkelijk opgedragen aan de violist Georg Augustin Polgrin, maar nadat deze laatste een vriendin van Beethoven onheus had behandeld, besliste Beethoven deze sonate niet langer op te dragen aan Polgrin maar aan zijn vriend Rudolph Kreutzer, die het echter nooit zal spelen. Sindsdien is deze 9de vioolsonate beter gekend als de Kreutzer sonate. Ik raad iedereen overigens aan om zowel de sonate van Janacek als deze van Beethoven even te beluisteren, beide zijn zeer prachtige werken. En nu is er dus het boek van Margriet De Moor (die voor ze begon te schrijven actief in de muziekwereld was). Het verhaal speelt zich dan ook af in de muziekwereld, waar een blinde muziekcriticus Marius van Vlooten (blind geworden na een mislukte zelfmoordpoging uit liefdesverdriet) zeer actief en van nabij musici volgt bij hun voorbereidende stages en optredens. Een jonge musicoloog die een beetje de taak van verteller van het ganse verhaal op zich neemt, stelt van Vlooten voor aan de jonge violiste Suzanna Flier en alle ingrediënten zijn hierbij aanwezig om een hedendaagse versie van het Tolstoi verhaal op te starten (maar wel met een enigszins verrassend einde). Het verhaal op zich is in feite niet zo belangrijk, maar de taal en vooral de link tussen taal en muziek zoals door de auteur gebruikt, is toch wel boeiend en maakt het een best leesbaar boek, zonder hier nu in superlatieven te vervallen. ( )
  FrankDeClerck | Jan 23, 2014 |
liebe, drama und eifersucht in einer beunruhigender mischung. margriet de moor (in deutscher übersetzung) schafft immer eine besondere atmosphere die ich bewundere, obwohl ich es nicht genau benennen kann. dieses ist allerdings nicht mein lieblingswerk von ihr. ( )
  flydodofly | Jun 13, 2011 |
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With an "astute sense of musical form and a wonderful sense of passion" (New York Times Book Review), master storyteller Margriet de Moor, one of Europe's foremost novelists, once again brings us a richly imagined and highly original tale of passion and jealousy. The unnamed narrator, a young musicologist, meets and befriends the famous blind music critic Marius van Vlooten. Their first encounter is on an airplane en route to a master class in Bordeaux, where the narrator introduces Marius to Suzanna, the pretty first violinist of a string quartet there to perform Janácek's Kreutzer Sonata. From this chance meeting, a passionate love affair soon develops between Marius and Suzanna. They become engaged and marry. A series of subsequent conversations between Marius and the narrator reveals the truth behind Marius's blindness: when he was a young student, he had fallen madly in love with a girl who spurned him. Despairing, he tried to commit suicide, but succeeded only in blinding himself. Now, ten years later, Marius is prey to another terrible dilemma: he loves Suzanna desperately, but, strongly suspecting she has a lover, becomes insanely jealous. His suspicions and his past draw him--and the reader--into a dramatic and tense Hitchcockian vertigo, where the tragedy plays itself out. This subtly constructed novel evokes powerful emotions through what the characters see and don't see, but mostly through what they hear--the language of music. Skyhorse Publishing, as well as our Arcade, Yucca, and Good Books imprints, are proud to publish a broad range of books for readers interested in fiction--novels, novellas, political and medical thrillers, comedy, satire, historical fiction, romance, erotic and love stories, mystery, classic literature, folklore and mythology, literary classics including Shakespeare, Dumas, Wilde, Cather, and much more. While not every title we publish becomes a New York Times bestseller or a national bestseller, we are committed to books on subjects that are sometimes overlooked and to authors whose work might not otherwise find a home.

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