Settings & Atmosphere - Fiction, Religion & Beliefs - Fiction, Christian Fiction & Literature, Occupations - Fiction
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Overview
In the gentle precinct of Aldminster Cathedral, crisis loomed. The urbane and worldly Dean (Purdey guns and the regular arrival of a delivery van from Berry Brothers) wanted nothing so much as to restore and beautify his beloved Cathedral--even if it meant sacrificing the Choir School to pay for it. Alexander Troy, Headmaster of the school, a conscientious man, somewhat out of his depth with his elusive and poetical wife (once seen walking barefoot in the dew across the Cathedral Close) was determined that nothing and no-one-certainly not the overbearing Dean-should destroy the Choir.As the rift widened into Machiavellian dimensions, many others found themselves caught in the schism--Leo Beckford, brilliant but wayward organist, repelling the adoration of the Dean's dreadful daughter--the gentle, left-wing Bishop, trying to soothe the angry protagonists--Sally Ashworth, mother of the leading chorister, fighting loneliness and an erring and absent husband. Each frail and human dilemma took its part in the greater turmoil of Chapter and Close and the final battle for the survival of the Choir.
From the bestselling author of The Rector's Wife, which has been made into a three-part serialization for Masterpiece Theatre, comes The Choir, a story of secrets in the seemingly gentle world behind the closed doors of Aldminster Cathedral. Scheduled to be a part-five series on Masterpiece Theatre in November 1995.
Editorials
Publishers Weekly -
As in the music that pervades the plot of Trollope's (The Rector's Wife) absorbing novel, contrapuntal technique results in a brilliant composition. Like her ancestor Anthony, Trollope focuses on an English cathedral town and its dissonant voices. Hugh Cavendish is dean of Aldminster Cathedral. The father of mutinous, unorthodox children, he is a bitterly disappointed man who craves administrative and spiritual authority. The prized boy's choir, however, is under the authority of King's School headmaster Alexander Troy and music master Leo Beckford. When the cathedral needs a quarter-million pounds worth of roof repairs, all matters of God, pedagogy, politics and music become matters of funds. Cavendish prefers to pay off the roof costs by sacrificing the expensive-to-maintain choir. Meanwhile, socialist/atheist city councilman Frank Ashworth wants the town to buy the headmaster's house out from under him to use as a community facility. Into the fray fall Sally Ashworth, married to Frank's long-absent son and in love with Leo; Sally's young son, Henry, the choir star; Alexander's untethered wife, Felicity; and Hugh's daughter Ianthe, an up-and-comer in the music business, who helps give her father what he deserves. Sacred music, the perfect treble of pre-pubescent boys and delicious deadpan understatement create a uniquely rich soundtrack on the pages of this beautifully crafted tale, which was first published in Britain in 1978. Author tour. (Sept.)Library Journal
Trollope's contemporary novels usually take place in picturesque English villages where the business of the church is inextricably bound up with the business of the town and where, behind the front doors of their gentrified cottages, people live messy lives. In the village of Aldminster, factions are lining up over the disposal of the church's dwindling cofferson the side of its much-needed new roof or on the side of its prestigious but high-maintenance choir. The large cast of characters features Sally Ashworth, whose marriage has been strained by her husband's frequent business absences; her young son, Henry, who has just been invited to join the choir; her father-in-law, Frank, a champion of leftist and lost causes who loves his grandson and the choir with equal ardor; and Leo Beckford, the organist with whom Sally falls in love. Trollope's villagers, young and old, take up room in one's heart. Published in Britain in 1988 and issued in the United States for the first time to coincide with its appearance on Masterpiece Theater, The Choir is one of Trollope's very best. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 5/15/95.]Barbara Love, Kingston P.L., OntarioBook Details
Published
May 25, 2011
Publisher
Random House Publishing Group
Pages
320
ISBN
9780307757883