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Monday, October 14, 2024

The Gustav Sonata by Rose Tremain- 2015 - 244 Pages



 The Gustav Sonata by Rose Tremain- 2015 - 244 Pages

2015 Jewish Book of the Year.

"The Gustav Sonata is a work of extreme and painful beauty, the story of one profound love amid many failed relationships, and of the conflict between passion and self-control. Rose Tremain is one of the very finest British novelists, and deserves, with this brilliant novel, to reach a wide new audience."
― Salman Rushdie

The Gustav Sonata” primarily takes place in pre and post-WWII Switzerland. It offers an interesting slant on the war and the meaning of neutrality by focusing on the lives of two different families affected by the greater conflict. It’s a deeply immersive story about loyalty during times of conflict, ambition, betrayal and family strife.

The novel centres around a Swiss boy named Gustav whose single mother Emilie struggles to make ends meet while working in an Emmental cheese factory. His father Erich died at an early age, but was once an assistant police chief during the tense period in the lead up to the war. In 1948, a six year old Gustav befriends a new Jewish boy named Anton at school. Emilie resents her son’s companion because she blames their diminished circumstances on the influx of Jewish refugees. Despite his mother’s objections, Gustav and Anton form a special bond which continues throughout their lives. Questions raised about how Emilie got to this difficult point are answered in the second part of the novel which moves back to 1937 to recount her tumultuous marriage with Erich. The third part of the book then skips far forward to the end of the 20th century to show how dilemmas about his family and his country’s past still resonate for Gustav in his later years.

The Gustav Sonata is a very powerful account, with turns I never saw coming but once they happened it was inevitable and perfect.

Rose Tremain's best-selling novels have won many awards, including the Baileys Women's Prize, the Whitbread Novel of the Year, the James Tait Black Memorial Prize, and the Prix Femina Etranger. Restoration, the first of her novels to feature Robert Merivel, was shortlisted for the Booker Prize. She lives in Norfolk and London with the biographer Richard Holmes.











2 comments:

  1. I've really loved the novels of hers I've read. She has a way of crawling so deeply into characters that it can surprise you how emotionally invested you become in their stories as she allows them to unspool. This is still on my TBR but you make me want to read it RIGHT NOW. heh

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  2. I have only read two novels by Rose Tremain but they were both great. Your review is highly interesting. Thanks for that.
    Here is mine:
    https://momobookblog.blogspot.com/2018/02/tremain-rose-gustav-sonata.html

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your comments help keep us going and do a lot to make the blog more interesting.thanks