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MR. BEETHOVEN by Paul Griffiths Kirkus Star

MR. BEETHOVEN

by Paul Griffiths

Pub Date: Oct. 19th, 2021
ISBN: 978-1-68137-580-9
Publisher: New York Review Books

The great composer pays a visit to Boston in this high-concept novel about Old World musical genius and emerging American society.

The fourth novel by Welsh music critic and librettist Griffiths imagines Ludwig van Beethoven sailing from Europe to America in 1833. This is peculiar, considering that Beethoven died in 1827. But Griffiths wants to explore what might’ve happened if the composer had followed through on a commission he was once offered to write an oratorio for the Handel and Haydn Society of Boston. Moreover, Griffiths restricts Beethoven’s dialogue to documented statements from his papers. That makes for a novel that feels engagingly authentic while also working as a self-aware feat of metafiction. Griffiths plays with footnotes, point of view, musical notation, and historical records to develop his story while also putting Beethoven at the center of a range of lively relationships. He develops a gentle rapport with Thankful, a woman who teaches the deaf composer sign language, parries with the officious reverend who’s written a dreadful libretto for the oratorio based on the book of Job, and tests the patience of the society members concerned the maestro won’t meet his deadline. (A young Herman Melville also makes a brief, amusing cameo.) In the process, Griffiths spotlights a country that’s anxious to establish its cultural standing while still tethered to its stiff Puritan nature. In that regard, Beethoven is both a unifying force and a means to expose the fault lines. And though the Oulipian strictures might’ve suggested stiffness, the novel feels like the best kind of historical fiction, open-minded while honoring facts.

Stylistically rich and thoughtfully conceived historical fiction.