Symphony

Front Cover
Macmillan, 2007 M12 10 - 374 pages

In 1827 Harriet Smithson, a beautiful and talented young Irish actress, makes an unusual decision. Determined to avoid the traditional route to stardom via the manager’s bed, she joins an English company in the bold experiment of taking Shakespeare to Paris.

With the ferment of revolution in the air, the new generation is longing for a novel kind of passionate, spontaneous art. And to Harriet’s astonishment, it is embodied in her---La Belle Irlandaise. In the midst of this frenzy she finds herself pursued by a strange, intense young composer named Hector Berlioz. So begins a painful and profound love affair. She is his muse, his idée fixe, his obsession; and Berlioz’s Symphonie Fantastique, directly inspired by Harriet, will change music forever.

Symphony is an audacious, brilliant, and haunting novel, set against a background of nineteenth-century theatre, Romantic art, music, and revolutionary Europe. But at its heart lies the story of two lives transfigured and destroyed by genius, inspiration, and madness.

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Contents

Section 1
1
Section 2
9
Section 3
42
Section 4
59
Section 5
91
Section 6
92
Section 7
127
Section 8
149
Section 13
236
Section 14
263
Section 15
271
Section 16
299
Section 17
323
Section 18
333
Section 19
357
Section 20
362

Section 9
164
Section 10
178
Section 11
185
Section 12
203
Section 21
373
Section 22
Section 23
Copyright

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About the author (2007)

Jude Morgan, who studied writing with Malcolm Bradbury and Angela Carter, lives in Peterborough, England.

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