meganbmoore (
meganbmoore) wrote2010-03-24 08:25 pm
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The Musician's Daughter by Susanne Dunlap
Theresa’s father is a musician in the court of Prince Nicholas Esterhazy’s court in 18th century Vienna. She wants to be a musician herself, and plays the viola, but her mother intends for her to marry soon. When her father is killed, her pregnant mother is bedridden with shock, and Theresa has to find a way to provide for the family, even as she learns that her father was murdered, and may have been involved in a larger scheme against corruption in the court that may have also involved a group of (thankfully non-fetishized) gypsies that are camped nearby.
The book is stronger than the
Also, I have a strong hatred for the title (yay for the pretty cover?). Not only is it of the “female’s identity determined by relationship with more important man” but it also ignores that fact that Theresa is a musician herself, but I guess that’s not considered as important. Headbash here. The Musician would have been a much better title.