Daily Archives: September 5, 2010

It’s Monday, what are you reading?

Sheila from One Person’s Journey through a World of Books hosts this meme and I love to participate in it! Head on over and check out her blog and the great participants there.

While you are here, be sure to check out the new tab up there at the top titled Entwife Read-Alongs! Our September book has been chosen and a page set up dedicated to it (along with a summary of our August book!).

I’ve started school this week so my reading has suffered (unless you count the endless chapters of English Comp and Law textbooks as reading!).  I need to find a way to successfully juggle school and reading so hopefully I’ll be able to do that soon.

Books I’ve Read this Week (Links to reviews):

  1. Nightshade by Ronie Kendig
  2. The Financial Lives of the Poets by Jess Walter
  3. The Marbury Lens by Andrew Smith
  4. The Twin’s Daugher by Lauren Logsted-Baratz

Books I’m continuing to read:

The Wake of Forgiveness by Bruce Machart

Book reviews posted this week:

  1. Under this Unbroken Sky by Shandi Mitchell (GIVEAWAY!)
  2. Peace Like a River by Leif Enger
  3. Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier
  4. Shiver & Linger by Maggie Stiefvater
  5. Constellation Chronicles: The Lost Civilization of Aries by Vincent Lowry
  6. The Bells by Richard Harvell

Books to read this week:

The Day the Flowers Died by Ami Rebecca Blackwelder

(Buy on {indie}pendent Books with the link above!)

The Remains by Vincent Zandri

The Solitude of Prime Numbers by Paolo Giordano

Clockwork Angel by Cassandra Clare

The Bells by Richard Harvell

The Bells: A NovelThe Bells: A Novel by Richard Harvell

Pre-Order from The Book Depository

Short Summary:

Dazzling, enchanting and epic, The Bells is the confession of a thief, kidnapper and unlikely lover — a boy with the voice of an angel whose exquisite sense of hearing becomes both his life’s tragic curse and its greatest blessing.

Moses Froben was born in a belfry high in the Swiss Alps, the bastard son of a deaf-mute woman banished to the church tower to ring each day the Loudest and Most Beautiful Bells in the land. His life is simple but he is content, until the day his father recognizes Moses’s singular sense of hearing and its power to expose his sins. Cast into the world with only his ears to protect and guide him, Moses finds refuge in the choir of the great Abbey of St. Gall and becomes its star singer, only to endure the horrifying act of castration meant to preserve his angelic voice and turn him into a musico.

My Review:

I wanted to start my review of this book off with quotes from its magnificent contents – but unfortunately I was reading an advanced copy of it so this is not an option.

As a music student there are times I pick up a book with a musical theme and, more often than not, I end up disappointed. This can be for a few reasons: the authors naivety when it comes to the skill and discipline, the lack of research placed in musical history (relying instead on a few famous names and works).

Richard Harvell did not disappoint me.

THE BELLS is the story of a young boy, the son of a deaf-mute woman who lives, for all intents and purposes, in the belfry of a church. She “hears” the vibrations of the bells; sounds that would deafen anyone else that came close to them. But Moses, her son, is far from deafened. Instead hearing these bells in her womb has given him an extraordinary ability – but one that leads to a life of pain and uncertainty.

Richard Harvell approaches the custom of castrating young boys to preserve their soprano voices with a heavy, knowledgeable hand. This is not light-hearted historical fiction. This is fiction that reminded me of Follett’s “Pillars of the Earth”. It’s detailed, horrifying and so amazingly fascinating I had a difficult time putting the book down.

In speaking to a friend recently she was shocked that this custom existed. It made me realize that, to many who do not have a musical background, this is a custom that is frequently overlooked when reading and writing historical stories. But can you blame us? This is not something that would be an easy or enlightening topic. Up until the early 19th century the castrati performed due to women not being allowed to sing. While the church took the official disapproving stance on this the opera theaters worshiped these men as angels.

This is a book – a story that sits on me heavily. It is not something I can easily set aside while moving on to the next book on the list. This is a book I need to talk to others about and encourage them to check out once it is made available. If you love historical fiction I recommend you do so as well.

View all my reviews