My Interview with Beethoven
A Novel
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- $4.99
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- $4.99
Publisher Description
Named one of Kirkus Reviews Best Indie Fiction of 2017! It's 1826, and young Virginia newspaperman George Thompson leaves his unhappy past for Vienna, "the city of music." His mission: interview the famous composer, Ludwig van Beethoven. But George wants more than an interview. He wants to get close to Beethoven because he's been told the musical genius is his natural father. George also needs to know what his mother, Hannah Bekker, had meant to Beethoven. While Beethoven tells George of his rise to fame, his tragic deafness, and the women he loved and lost, George wonders about Beethoven's intimate relationship with Hannah—and how he is to confess his real reason for interviewing the moody composer. What transpires turns George's life inside out, and forces Beethoven to reveal a disturbing, personal secret. Inspired by true events, "My Interview with Beethoven" is about a young man's journey that leads him to right wrongs, find love in unexpected ways, and heal the deep wounds of those he touches.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Jones's vivid debut follows a young man from Virginia on his quest to meet with Ludwig van Beethoven. In 1815 Williamsburg, Va., 11-year-old George Thompson is distressed when his stepfather, Robert, commits his mother to an insane asylum after learning she was not a pregnant widow when they married as she'd claimed, but had instead become pregnant after having an affair with Beethoven. Robert then renounces George as a son, and sends him to apprentice with a printer. The story jumps forward a decade to find George, now 23 and a newspaper reporter, planning a trip to Europe to interview the "Lion of Vienna." His motivation as a journalist pales in comparison to his desire to meet the man he believes to be his biological father. After being warned away by a number of people, George finally manages to meet Beethoven for the interview. The ardent, sentimental George pries mesmerizing stories of love and music from the composer, as Jones shifts to Beethoven's life via well-crafted flashbacks. While the prose is clunky ("the sleepiness in his head tried to make sense of the noise"), Jones convincingly fills out George's emotional arc, from the tale's somber opening to its optimistic close. Jones hits the mark with this strong historical tale. (Self-published)