Sex and Stravinsky
by Barbara Trapido
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The time is 1995, but everybody has a past. Brilliant Australian Caroline can command everyone except her own ghoulish mother, which means that things aren't easy for Josh and Zoe, her husband with Stravinsky-glasses and twelve-year-old daughter. Zoe reads girls' ballet books and longs for lessons; a thing denied her until a chance encounter on a school French exchange. Meanwhile, on the east coast of Africa, Hattie, Josh's first love, now writes girls' ballet books - that's when she can show more carve out the space between her husband and her crosspatch daughter. From far and wide, they are all drawn together- a masquerade in which things are not always what they seem. show lessTags
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One of the best books I’ve read this year, T was strangely reluctant to begin Sex & Stravinsky but the pleasure deferred became a pleasure hugely enhanced when I sampled Trapido’s champagne prose, elegant and sparkling.
A stylish romantic fantasy, the book straddles two continents with the tale of Hattie, delicate and exquisite, and her husband Herman, a South African couple, and their unspeakably awful adolescent daughter Cat; in England we have the indefatigably capable Amazon Caroline, her South African-born husband Josh, and Zoe, their balletomane teenage daughter.
They come together in a magical but unlikely Midsummer Night’s Dream scenario except the place is Durban not an Athenian forest, and instead of Oberon and Titania show more we have Hattie and Josh. Dazzling and exuberant, this book is a treat. show less
A stylish romantic fantasy, the book straddles two continents with the tale of Hattie, delicate and exquisite, and her husband Herman, a South African couple, and their unspeakably awful adolescent daughter Cat; in England we have the indefatigably capable Amazon Caroline, her South African-born husband Josh, and Zoe, their balletomane teenage daughter.
They come together in a magical but unlikely Midsummer Night’s Dream scenario except the place is Durban not an Athenian forest, and instead of Oberon and Titania show more we have Hattie and Josh. Dazzling and exuberant, this book is a treat. show less
Barbara Trapido is a wonderful writer, clever, amusing and romantic - dealing with the 'big' topics in an apparently light, but nuanced and sophisticated way. This novel, as you might expect, takes an operatic theme - and perhaps that's where I wasn't as convinced as I have been by her other novels. She sets up a complex plot, suitable for a comic opera, and then resolves it, slotting relationships together or apart, with recurring characters and themes; walk on roles (often the most intensely realised) and a set of fabulous locations, costumes, sets and casts. I think at times the necessities of the plot (I found myself searching back for links or glimpses a number of times) drive and restrict the narrative a bit too much. But this is show more carping - I'd certainly recommend it, just not as the place to start with Trapido. show less
A beautifully written novel with interesting and complex characters. The story moves fluidly between England and South Africa and tracks the lives of Josh, Caroline, Hattie, and Hermann and their respective children,siblings and parents. There are some wonderful insights in to these peoples' personalities and their foibles, strengths and failings.
I was only prevented from giving this book 5 stars because I felt the ending stretched the bounds of credulity in order to tie up the story. Strongly recommended both for an insight in to the human psyche and it's amusing take on the sometimes difficult mother/daughter relationship.
I was only prevented from giving this book 5 stars because I felt the ending stretched the bounds of credulity in order to tie up the story. Strongly recommended both for an insight in to the human psyche and it's amusing take on the sometimes difficult mother/daughter relationship.
I liked the writing, and a couple of the characters, but the plot resolution involved about six too many coincidences to be at all realistic, and the couples resolved themselves a bit too quickly and neatly. I suspect this is supposed to be a clever pastiche of a comic opera, but I didn't get it.
I didn't enjoy this as much as I expected to, but I think it is more me and less the book this time. I liked the first chapter, then lost my ability to concentrate.
I didn't enjoy this as much as I expected to, but I think it is more me and less the book this time. I liked the first chapter, then lost my ability to concentrate.
e book from Hants
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- Original publication date
- 2010
- Important places
- Durban, South Africa
- Dedication
- For Megan Vaughan
- First words
- Josh meets Caroline in a shared student house in London.
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- Members
- 171
- Popularity
- 190,902
- Reviews
- 8
- Rating
- (3.61)
- Languages
- English, Spanish
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 15
- ASINs
- 2





























































