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Beautiful Inez

by Bart Schneider
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Overview

Inez Roseman, a noted beauty, has a charismatic husband, two bright children, and a successful career as a lead violinist with the San Francisco Symphony. On the surface, she is a woman with an enviable life. But since the birth of her second child, Inez has been plagued by a depression that’s been deepened by her husband’s philandering. Now, at forty, the violinist is obsessed with thoughts of suicide.

Sylvia Bran, a waitress and music store pianist, also has an obsession. Enraptured by the beautiful violinist, Sylvia contrives a way to get to know Inez. At once seductive and solicitous, Sylvia awakens Inez from the suffocating grip of her career, the demands of motherhood, and the tensions of her unhappy marriage. The two women become lovers, embarking on a dance of passion and betrayal that soon spins out of control.

A novel of risk, passion, and surrender, Beautiful Inez is alive with the music that draws Inez and Sylvia together. Set against the vivid backdrop of San Francisco in the early 1960s, it is an unexpected journey into the lives of two masterfully drawn, unforgettable women.

Includes a new essay and a Q + A with the author.

Synopsis

Inez Roseman, a noted beauty, has a charismatic husband, two bright children, and a successful career as a lead violinist with the San Francisco Symphony. On the surface, she is a woman with an enviable life. But since the birth of her second child, Inez has been plagued by a depression that’s been deepened by her husband’s philandering. Now, at forty, the violinist is obsessed with thoughts of suicide.

Sylvia Bran, a waitress and music store pianist, also has an obsession. Enraptured by the beautiful violinist, Sylvia contrives a way to get to know Inez. At once seductive and solicitous, Sylvia awakens Inez from the suffocating grip of her career, the demands of motherhood, and the tensions of her unhappy marriage. The two women become lovers, embarking on a dance of passion and betrayal that soon spins out of control.

A novel of risk, passion, and surrender, Beautiful Inez is alive with the music that draws Inez and Sylvia together. Set against the vivid backdrop of San Francisco in the early 1960s, it is an unexpected journey into the lives of two masterfully drawn, unforgettable women.

Includes a new essay and a Q + A with the author.

Publishers Weekly

In this prequel to the author's 2001 novel, Secret Love, Schneider, founding editor of the Hungry Mind Review, delivers a polished, faintly old-fashioned tale of a violinist doomed to unhappiness in early 1960s San Francisco. At 40, ice princess Inez Roseman plays in the San Francisco Symphony and is a well-known soloist. Gifted with perfect pitch and blond Swedish beauty, she is married to prominent civil rights lawyer Jake Roseman (the protagonist of Secret Love) and has two children. Gradually, through an acquaintance with Sylvia Bran, a showroom pianist who passes herself off as a journalist in order to get to know lovely Inez, cracks are revealed in the pianist's exquisite exterior. Jake is an inveterate womanizer; Inez has been depressed since the birth of her eight-year-old son, Joey; and she harbors still-smarting emotional damage from childhood sexual abuse. Schneider's meandering narrative finally settles on the blossoming lesbian relationship between the self-invented Sylvia and the complicated Inez. Despite their passionate affair, Inez thinks constantly about committing suicide, which tortures Sylvia, who is haunted by the suicide of her own mother. The novel is set during the Cuban missile crisis, which deepens the climate of chilly self-destruction Schneider fosters. Though Inez and Sylvia's relationship is sensitively handled, readers may find it difficult to sympathize with poised, distant Inez. Agent, Marly Rusoff. (Feb.) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

About the Author, Bart Schneider

Bart Schneider is the author of the novels Blue Bossa, a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize, and Secret Love, a New York Times Notable Book of the Year. He was the founding editor of the Hungry Mind Review (later Ruminator Review) and now edits Speakeasy magazine.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

In this prequel to the author's 2001 novel, Secret Love, Schneider, founding editor of the Hungry Mind Review, delivers a polished, faintly old-fashioned tale of a violinist doomed to unhappiness in early 1960s San Francisco. At 40, ice princess Inez Roseman plays in the San Francisco Symphony and is a well-known soloist. Gifted with perfect pitch and blond Swedish beauty, she is married to prominent civil rights lawyer Jake Roseman (the protagonist of Secret Love) and has two children. Gradually, through an acquaintance with Sylvia Bran, a showroom pianist who passes herself off as a journalist in order to get to know lovely Inez, cracks are revealed in the pianist's exquisite exterior. Jake is an inveterate womanizer; Inez has been depressed since the birth of her eight-year-old son, Joey; and she harbors still-smarting emotional damage from childhood sexual abuse. Schneider's meandering narrative finally settles on the blossoming lesbian relationship between the self-invented Sylvia and the complicated Inez. Despite their passionate affair, Inez thinks constantly about committing suicide, which tortures Sylvia, who is haunted by the suicide of her own mother. The novel is set during the Cuban missile crisis, which deepens the climate of chilly self-destruction Schneider fosters. Though Inez and Sylvia's relationship is sensitively handled, readers may find it difficult to sympathize with poised, distant Inez. Agent, Marly Rusoff. (Feb.) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

In his third work of fiction, Schneider (founding editor of the Hungry Mind Review of Books, now called the Ruminator Review) tells the backstory of his previous Secret Love. Set during the Cuban Missile Crisis, the novel looks into the life of Inez Roseman, symphony violinist, mother of two, wife of famed lawyer Jake Roseman, daughter-in-law of her former violin teacher, and lover of the enigmatic Sylvia Bran. The reader is shown the turmoil that Inez must face daily as she tries to juggle all of her roles. Once distant and hurting, Inez is awakened to a new life as she stumbles into her relationship with Sylvia; Sylvia becomes the one thing that helps Inez focus on who she really wants to be and what she wants to do with her life. Readers of Secret Love will already know which path Inez chooses, but this work stands on its own as the story of a desperate woman's plight. Highly recommended for all libraries, especially those where Schneider's first two books were popular.-Leann Restaino, Jameson Health Syst. Lib., New Castle, PA Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

It's 1962. The world is about to change, and Inez Roseman can't wait for it to do so-or to check out of its travails. Former Hungry Mind Review editor Schneider turns in a prequel to Secret Love (2001), a title more suited to this book than to its predecessor. Inez is a talented if moody violinist for the San Francisco Symphony; it doesn't help that she's turning 40 and that her husband, a flashy attorney, has become an accomplished philanderer and now speaks to her mostly when he wants to criticize her: "If I wanted to marry Olive Oyl, I'd have married Olive Oyl." "Inez, you can't play the gas pedal like it's the pedal on a bass drum." Jake Roseman is a skilled bon vivant, mixes a fine highball, and makes a lot of money, but he's not much of a husband, and Inez, embarking on a difficult solo career, needs more attention than he seems willing to give. Enter Sylvia Bran, a plain but beguiling woman ten years Inez's junior, who introduces herself as a writer for the San Francisco Chronicle wanting to do a profile of Inez. Her would-be subject has never seen her byline, and therein hangs a good part of Schneider's tale, which, if sometimes melodramatic, is always believable and hits the right period-detail notes. This is true even when Schneider turns up the heat between Inez and Sylvia, threatening to scald a few eyeballs in the process; though the result is plenty steamy, there's also the nodding understanding between the two that though this sort of thing isn't supposed to happen in their day and age ("'Do you think it's terribly unnatural?' Sylvia asks"), it does. And so do many other things that, in the end, tear the Rosemans' house apart, thus setting the stage for what follows inSecret Love. Too talky by half, and the pensive, sometimes gloomy atmosphere, though well suited to the San Francisco fog, won't appeal to readers in need of cheering up. Still, Schneider spins a good yarn-and he knows his Mendelsohn. Agent: Marly Rusoff/Marly Rusoff Agency

Book Details

Published
March 1, 2006
Publisher
Crown Publishing Group
Pages
368
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781400054435

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