Beethoven''s Tenth
English
By (author): Richard Kluger
When the assistant manager of a hardware store in rural New Jersey shows up at the offices of Cubbage & Wakeham, an elite New York auction house, with a worn musical manuscript he hopes to sell for a small (or perhaps hefty) fortune, he is greeted with subdued snickersand not surprisingly. The title page of the document reads, William Tell: A Dramatic Symphony and is signed Ludwig van Beethoven. The bearer of the composition claims he recently came upon it in an old attic trunk while cleaning out his lately deceased grandfathers home in Zurich; several accompanying documents suggest the work was written there during the summer of 1814.
Since virtually all lovers of classical musicand many others who cant tell Stravinsky from Springsteenknow that Beethoven wrote nine sublime symphonies, and so evidence of a new-found tenth one by the supreme master of that musical form sets off an instant international uproar. Is the seemingly miraculous discovery the genuine article or an ingenious hoax?
To solve the tantalizing puzzle before placing the manuscript on the auction block at risk of becoming a global laughingstock, Cubbage & Wakehams management organizes a team of intensely skeptical investigators, among them the worlds top Beethoven scholars and forensic experts, all of them out to prove the find a fraud. But as evidence to the contrary begins to pile up, tensions rise among the corps of authenticators, the financial stakes soar as would-be exploiters of the symphony gather, the governments of five nations seek to claim the work as a national treasure, and the mystery artfully spun by novelist Richard Kluger deepens by the day.
Among the beguiling questions that demand answers:
The answersand a cast of feisty characters with conflicting stakes in the questmake Beethovens Tenth a deftly twisty and challenging detective novel, enriched by the prodigious research of author Kluger, a Pulitzer Prize-winning social historian.