There was a time when Gustav Mahler was dismissed as derivative, but his reputation has soared in recent years.
In this compelling book – part biography, part memoir, part cultural history – Norman Lebrecht relates his enthusiasm for the composer and seeks to win him a wider audience. His tone is informal (chapters include "Desperately Seeking Mahler" and "Whose Resurrection Is It Anyway?"); his style all-embracing (he compiles a list of Mahler fans that ranges from Mikhail Gorbachev to the Grateful Dead). He makes a forbidding subject seem approachable, arguing persuasively that anyone can find within the "Mahler fortress ... a private refuge".
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