The Novel in the Viola

Paperback / ISBN-13: 9780340995693

Price: £9.99

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In the spring of 1938 Elise Landau arrives at Tyneford, the great house on the bay. A bright young thing from Vienna forced to become a parlour-maid, she knows nothing about England, except that she won’t like it. As servants polish silver and serve drinks on the lawn, Elise wears her mother’s pearls beneath her uniform, and causes outrage by dancing with a boy called Kit. But war is coming and the world is changing. And Elise must change with it.

At Tyneford she learns that you can be more than one person.
And that you can love more than once.

Reviews

A vivid and poignant story about hope, loss and reinvention
<i>Psychologies</i>
'Prepare to be seriously charmed'.
<i>The Times</i>
'a subtle and moving examination of the dilemma faced by immigrants to modern Britain'.
<i>Observer</i>
Solomons's confident timing means that we sense what is about to happen only moments before it occurs, and are compelled to read on, not as one might expect for the frisson of a new event, but for the thrill of having our intuition confirmed.
Stephanie Bishop, <i>TLS</i>
'Prepare to be seriously charmed'.
<i>The Times</i>
For Mr Rosenblum's List: 'The descriptions of England - as friend, adversary and eventually home - are exquisite. A touching, surprising and satisfying read.'
Sadie Jones, author of <i>The Outcast</i>
'Utterly charming and very funny'
Paul Torday, author of <i>Salmon Fishing in the Yemen</i>
'An unususal, comedy-rich novel... a treat of a book'.
<i>Guardian</i>
'An engaging read ... ripe for the screen'
<i>Guardian</i>
'A deeply touching and blissfully romantic elegy for a lost world.'
<i>The Times</i>
'Utterly charming and very funny'
Paul Torday, author of <i>Salmon Fishing in the Yemen</i>
For Mr Rosenblum's List: 'The descriptions of England - as friend, adversary and eventually home - are exquisite. A touching, surprising and satisfying read.'
Sadie Jones, author of <i>The Outcast</i>
'An unususal, comedy-rich novel... a treat of a book'.
<i>Guardian</i>
'both a love story and an elegy to the English country house...the greatest pleasure is its stirring narrative and the constant sense of discovery within the historical sweep of Elise's life...Solomon's confident timing means that we sense what is about to happen only moments before it occurs, and are compelled to read on, not as one might expect for the frisson of a new event, but for the thrill of having our intuition confirmed.'
Stephanie Bishop, <i>TLS</i>
A warm story with a lovely uncloying sweetness.
<i>Saga</i> Magazine
'a subtle and moving examination of the dilemma faced by immigrants to modern Britain'.
<i>Observer</i>