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The Soloist by Mark Salzman
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The Soloist (original 1994; edition 1995)

by Mark Salzman

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7422030,301 (3.71)69
As a child, Renne showed promise of becoming one of the world's greatest cellists. Now, years later, his life suddenly is altered by two events: he becomes a juror in a murder trial for the brutal killing of a Buddhist monk, and he takes on as a pupil a Korean boy whose brilliant musicianship reminds him of his own past.… (more)
Member:CNeedham
Title:The Soloist
Authors:Mark Salzman
Info:Vintage (1995), Paperback, 304 pages
Collections:Your library
Rating:*****
Tags:fiction

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The Soloist by Mark Salzman (1994)

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Showing 1-5 of 20 (next | show all)
bookbox; second book with the same title - and that one featured a cello too. In this one, Renee is a child prodigy of the cello, home schooled and moved to Germany to pursue his studies. He doesn't know how to do anything except practice and do concerts, until his gift abruptly leaves him. Struggling as a college music teacher and privately teaching cello lessons, he's just marking time until two things redirect his life. First he is chosen as a jurist for a murder trial and he gives in to become the teacher/mentor to a Korean boy, who has the potential, like him in his early years, to be an extraordinary cellist. During the novel, Renne has some growth himself, no longer torturing himself for not being concert material any more. and strangely, tutoring the Korean boy who was not as limited as him, helps him move forward with his life. ( )
  nancynova | Feb 11, 2024 |
A book written with four different story lines (the musicians past, his teaching of a your Korean, his relationship with a woman, and a trial of a Zen Buddhist, which the author pulls together at the end with partial success ( )
  snash | Jul 24, 2022 |
This is a novel (not to be confused withh the true story that has been made into a movie starring Jamie Foxx and Robert Downey Jr).
It is an incandescent work about personal growth. Renne is a former musical child prodigy now teaching music at a university - too young to be a retired concert soloist, too old to still be a virgin. ( )
  BookConcierge | Feb 3, 2016 |
A fascinating book about a year in the life of a cellist in Los Angeles who takes on a very young student and becomes a juror on a murder trial with an insanity defense. Renne (Reinhart) Sundheimer was a cello wunderkind who suddenly and inexplicably lost his ability to concertize at 21. Thereafter he taught students at the university. As the book opens he is 34 and has been asked to teach a new very young and talented Korean boy. He's also received a summons for jury trial. These two stories, although very different, are interwoven and show you the artist and the man in all his complexities. As someone who has worked for trial attorneys for over 40 years, I loved the courtroom scenes and Renne's thoughtful remarks on the witnesses and the process. As a music lover, I enjoyed and was educated by his explanations of the musical pieces they played or heard. ( )
  whymaggiemay | Jun 7, 2015 |
I don't know what Salzman set out to do but whatever it was, I think he failed. The main character is unsympathetic in the way a person might be when he's always been told he's brilliant and special and he turns out not to be. In that way, Salzman succeeds in creating him. Then again, it's hard to care about his feelings and experiences because he's so self-centered. Not an easy book to like and, with a slapped-on ending, an unsatisfying read.

Petrea Burchard
Camelot & Vine ( )
  PetreaBurchard | Feb 9, 2014 |
Showing 1-5 of 20 (next | show all)
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For Martha L. Salzman
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This morning I read an article suggesting that Saint Theresa of Avila, a sixteenth-century Spanish mystic noted for her ecstatic visions, suffered from a neurological disorder known to cause hallucinations.
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This…makes me wonder how nature could have designed human beings to be so eager to make children, yet so uncertain how to raise them. When do you let children follow their own instincts, and when do you push them to do what you wish you had done yourself?
When you are playing music, you have a clear goal: to organize and produce sounds in such a way that they express shades of emotion. By practicing, you struggle throughout your life to make your communications more direct and copncise, so that a person hearing you play receives emotional impressions in as pure a form as possible.
I take after my father in this regard: he treated Judaism as a form of culture rather than as a religion. He believed that by observing the holidays, learning Jewish history and studying the Talmud, one gained an intellectual understanding of the tradition that helped give one a good starting point, but not an end point, for the development of personal morality.
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As a child, Renne showed promise of becoming one of the world's greatest cellists. Now, years later, his life suddenly is altered by two events: he becomes a juror in a murder trial for the brutal killing of a Buddhist monk, and he takes on as a pupil a Korean boy whose brilliant musicianship reminds him of his own past.

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