Book Review: The Gustav Sonata by Rose Tremain

Powerful tale of love and friendship

TheGustavSonataAbout the Book

Description (courtesy of Goodreads): What is the difference between friendship and love? Or between neutrality and commitment? Gustav Perle grows up in a small town in ‘neutral’ Switzerland, where the horrors of the Second World War seem a distant echo. But Gustav’s father has mysteriously died, and his adored mother Emilie is strangely cold and indifferent to him. Gustav’s childhood is spent in lonely isolation, his only toy a tin train with painted passengers staring blankly from the carriage windows. As time goes on, an intense friendship with a boy of his own age, Anton Zwiebel, begins to define Gustav’s life. Jewish and mercurial, a talented pianist tortured by nerves when he has to play in public, Anton fails to understand how deeply and irrevocably his life and Gustav’s are entwined.

Book Facts

  • Format: Paperback
  • Publisher: Vintage
  • No. of pages: 308
  • Publication date: 26th January 2017
  • Genre: Historical Fiction

To purchase The Gustav Sonata from Amazon.co.uk, click here (link provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme)

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My Review

The Gustav Sonata is one of the novels on the 2017 shortlist for The Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction. You can find a list of all the shortlisted novels here.

For two thirds of the book I thought this was absolutely stunning. Themes of sadness, betrayal and disappointment pervade the book and Tremain is particularly good at observing the humdrum, at times sordid, details of everyday life: the kitchen shelf that substitutes for a table, the freezing water pump in the yard, the cigarette butts that litter the floor. ‘He thinks how shabby the world is and how tired and old and full of discarded things.’ On the other hand, at times, there is striking descriptive writing:

‘Europe is moving, slowly, almost blindly, like a sleepwalker, towards catastrophe. But in the villages of Mittelland, the calendar of feast days and festivals unrolls through a fine untroubled summer. The valleys, with their plainchant of cowbells, lie half sleeping in the sun. The rivers, fed by snow melt and spring rain, bubble innocently along, in their eternal, gossipy conversations.’

In Part 1, covering the years 1948 and 49, we meet young Gustav Perle, living in shabby poverty with his mother, Emilie. Gustav seems to have done nothing to earn the coldness shown to him by his mother. For her, an important lesson of life is the need to ‘master oneself’. This is linked to the concept of Switzerland’s jealously guarded neutrality. As Gustav’s tutor tells him, ‘It means we believe in ourselves. We protect our own’.   This lesson is touchingly brought to life as Gustav tries to live ‘a mastered life’ as he has been taught while his mother, Emilie, is in hospital.

At school, Gustav meets Anton and, from the beginning, there is an intensity to their friendship that sets it apart from the ordinary. This is manifested in the strangely unnerving game they play during their holiday in Davos – ‘We thought we really had power over life and death” – and during which we first perceive the depth of Anton’s reliance on Gustav.

Part 2 takes the reader back to 1937 where we witness Emilie’s first meeting with Erich, Gustav’s father, and their ensuing relationship. When war comes to Europe, tragic consequences ensue from Erich’s decision to follow his conscience rather than the requirements of the law – the expected Swiss way – when carrying out his police duties. As this section of the book unfolds, we learn everything we need to know about why Emilie later acts as she does towards Gustav (the ‘peculiar chemistry of alienation’ noted by Erich) and her antipathy to Gustav’s friendship with Anton and his family.

Unfortunately, I felt the third and final part of the book was the weakest. The story skips forward over fifty years from Part 1 and I missed being able to observe the development of Anton and Gustav’s relationship in the intervening years. The introduction of other characters, such as Colonel Ashley-Norton, seemed somewhat of a distraction. The focus does return to the bond between Anton and Gustav towards the end of Part 3 but the change in their relationship, although not completely unexpected, seemed hastily rendered to my mind.   On the plus side, Gustav’s discovery of the truth behind his father’s death provides resolution to questions raised earlier in the book.

If I‘d felt the same way about the final part as I did about the first two this would have been a worthy winner for me but I find myself preferring other shortlisted novels.

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In three words: Intense, emotional, tender

Try something similar…A Place Called Winter by Patrick Gale


RoseTremainAbout the Author

Rose Tremain’s best-selling novels have won many awards, including the Orange Prize, the Whitbread Novel of the Year, the James Tait Black Memorial Prize and the Prix Femina Etranger. Restoration, the first of her novels to feature Robert Merivel, was shortlisted for the Booker Prize. She lives in Norfolk and London with the biographer Richard Holmes.

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Interview: Timothy Ashby, author of In Shadowland

Today’s guest on What Cathy Read Next is Timothy Ashby, author of In Shadowland. This exciting historical thriller is the second outing for Special Agent Seth Armitage, a follow-up to Devil’s Den. I’m delighted that Timothy has agreed to answer some questions about his book, its inspiration and his approach to writing.

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InShadowlandAbout the Book

Teddy Roosevelt’s son Quentin was killed in WWI. So why is another man’s corpse in his grave? J. Edgar Hoover summons reluctant Special Agent Seth Armitage back to the Bureau to investigate the shocking revelation. Armitage must travel the world to probe the mystery, and quickly becomes targeted himself by powerful and ruthless forces on both sides of the Atlantic who are committed to keeping the scandal secret-at any cost. The line between enemy and ally blurs perilously as Seth becomes enmeshed with a WWI vet turned assassin with whom he shares a strange bond, a beautiful double agent with a personal agenda, and the political madmen building the Nazi party. The complex web reaches ever deeper, until Seth finds himself forced to make the terrifying choice to protect or destroy the soon-to-be Fuhrer, Adolf Hitler.

In his second book featuring Armitage, Ashby once again brings to life the emotionally-charged period between WWI and WWII, showing us that psychological wounds of war do not heal quickly, and the thirst for power and revenge runs very deep.

Praise for In Shadowland

“Suspenseful…Provocative…A riveting work of political intrigue [that]…weaves real-world history into a deft, dynamic historical thriller.” (Kirkus Reviews)

Book Facts

  • Format: ebook
  • Publisher: Author Planet Press
  • Publication date: 15th November 2016
  • Genre: Historical Fiction, Thriller

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Amazon.co.uk
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Interview: Timothy Ashby, author of In Shadowland

You had an exciting career before you started writing.  How much of that experience do you bring to your books?

Quite a lot. I learned about the “shadowy” world of international diplomacy and intelligence operations, and worked with a number of military veterans who couldn’t shake the past.

How did you approach the research for In Shadowland? Do you enjoy the process of research?

I immersed myself in the culture of the 1920s, using original sources such as magazines, music, and biographies. I delved deeply into the history of the period, learning much about US politics of the era and the rise of Nazism in Germany. I loved the research and was so saturated with the time period that I began dreaming about it!

What was the biggest challenge you encountered when writing In Shadowland

There were two primary challenges: making all the “moving parts” of the plot work chronologically so the fast pace necessary for a thriller could be maintained, and achieving a balance for the historical setting so that just the right amount of detail would authentically convey the atmosphere.

In Shadowland is the second book featuring the character Special Agent Seth Armitage.  What made you decide to give Seth another case to investigate?

I like Seth and wanted him to grow as a character. Physically, he’s an amalgam of my two grandfathers (appearance, dress etc.), one of whom died long before I was born (like Seth’s grandpa killed at the Battle of Gettysburg), and the other who was an old Virginia gentleman.

It seems to me that both In Shadowland and its predecessor, Devil’s Den, explore the psychological effects of war.  What is it about this subject that interests you?

My mother worked as an Occupational Therapist for Veterans Administration hospitals during and after World War II, and when I was a child she often talked about the experience of treating psychologically damaged veterans of not only World War II but from the First World War. Subsequently I met many Vietnam veterans who were dealing with similar problems. I feel great pity and empathy for them all, and wanted to sympathetically portray them in the context of a thriller.

Your website describes you as ‘Novelist’ and ‘Provocateur’.  How does the latter manifest itself in your writing?

I enjoy upending conventional wisdom about history and provoking readers by blurring the line between fact and fiction. For example, few people today know that Henry Ford was an outrageous anti-Semite and racist who funded the rise of Hitler and the Nazis, and was the only American mentioned with almost fawning admiration in Mein Kampf!

Do you have a special place to write or any writing rituals?

I wrote most of In Shadowland in the South of France, looking out over the Mediterranean. I tend to write in the morning, starting early and finishing by noon. I set myself a quota of 500 words per day, even if I don’t end up using the daily output.

What other writers do you admire?

Frederick Forsyth, Wilbur Smith, Deon Meyer, Stephen Hunter and Don Winslow are my favourites.

What are you working on next? 

A non-fiction historical work, a biography of my distant ancestor William Ashby of Loseby, who was Queen Elizabeth I’s ambassador to Scotland during the Spanish Armada (1588) and had a fascinating prior career as an English secret agent.

Thank you, Timothy, for sharing those insights with us. I look forward to reading In Shadowland.


TimothyAshbyAbout the Author

Timothy Ashby, author of the best-selling thriller Time Fall, worked in Washington, D.C. as a counter-terrorism consultant to the U.S. State Department, and a senior official at the U.S. Commerce Department. He held two Top Secret security clearances and worked with a number of colourful characters, including members of the U.S. military’s Joint Special Operations Command.  Before and after his career in Washington, Ashby led a peripatetic life. Born in the USA, he spent his teenage years in Grenada, where he learned to surf, sail and dive, and where his lifelong passion for history and archaeology was inspired. It was also in Grenada that he became passionate about writing, having the good fortune to be mentored by authors Martin Woodhouse and Dudley Pope. Mr. Pope named one of the characters in his Lord Ramage series “Captain Ashby,” in honour of the teenage Tim Ashby.

Ashby received his PhD in International Relations from the University of Southern California, an MBA degree at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland, and a law degree from Seattle University. A licensed attorney, he worked in Cuba and Eastern Europe on a variety economic development projects and has served as CEO of several global companies that he founded.

He is the author of the novels Time Fall, Devil’s Den and In Shadowland, and numerous articles.

Connect with Timothy

Website  http://timashby.com/
Twitter https://twitter.com/TFAshby
Facebook https://www.facebook.com/TimAshbyBooks
Goodreads https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/7171915.Timothy_Ashby