An Unfinished Score
As she prepares dinner for her husband and
their extended family, Suzanne hears on the radio
that a jetliner has crashed and her lover is dead.
Alex Elling was a renowned orchestra conductor.
Suzanne is a concert violist, long unsatisfied with
her marriage to a composer whose music turns
emotion into thought. Now, more alone than
she’s ever been, she must grieve secretly. But as
c...more
their extended family, Suzanne hears on the radio
that a jetliner has crashed and her lover is dead.
Alex Elling was a renowned orchestra conductor.
Suzanne is a concert violist, long unsatisfied with
her marriage to a composer whose music turns
emotion into thought. Now, more alone than
she’s ever been, she must grieve secretly. But as
c...more
Hardcover, 272 pages
Published
April 6th 2010
by Unbridled Books
(first published 2010)
Friend Reviews
To see what your friends thought of this book,
please sign up.
This book is not yet featured on Listopia.
Add this book to your favorite list »
Community Reviews
(showing
1-30
of
269)
From my blog...[return]An Unfinished Score is an exquisitely composed work of fiction, lyrical in tone and quality, a literary ballet, a complex story told through music, while the ending, as with a good concert, will take the reader's breath away. Suzanne Sullivan is leading a double life. She is married to Ben, yet had been seeing a married man, Alex Elling, her orchestra conductor. Suzanne learns of Alex Elling's tragic death while making dinner for her family. Suzanne is unable to outwardly...more
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it,
click here.
Like the love affair between concert violist Suzanne and famous conductor Alex, this book is also "saturated with music." Perhaps, as some famous musician once said, "Writing about music is like dancing about architecture" - can it be done? I'm not a musician but after reading An Unfinished Score by Elise Blackwell, it appears that writing about music in the context of love, pain, regret, jealousy, and joy can be done superbly. Blackwell's prose made me hear music in my head as I read this story...more
While I was reading this book, I was trying to think how I would describe it. And yet now that I’ve finished reading it and sat on this review for a few days trying to flesh it out in my head, I find that my first thought still remains the best way to describe this book.
Beautiful.
There is such depth to this tale, and it is filled with such emotion that it reminds me of a great piece of music that could almost bring you to tears. It’s heart wrenching and yet, peaceful, bringing you fro...more
Beautiful.
There is such depth to this tale, and it is filled with such emotion that it reminds me of a great piece of music that could almost bring you to tears. It’s heart wrenching and yet, peaceful, bringing you fro...more
Jun 21, 2010
Judy
rated it
4 of 5 stars
Recommends it for:
anyone who appreciates good writing
Shelves:
21st-century-fiction
This brand new novel is best read in one day. The narrative arc and the emotional depth had a sumptuous impact. I never wanted to stop reading it.
Suzanne is a classical violist with a non-attentive husband (also a musician as well as a composer) and a lover who conducts orchestras. On the first page Suzanne is cooking dinner when she hears on the radio that her lover has died in a plane crash.
Also living with Suzanne and her husband are Petra, a violinist, Suzanne's best friend and single par...more
i picked this book up because i am a musician and a reader, hoping for something that was able to bring two of my loves into one happy place, and i definitely wasn't let down. although it was less happy and more passionate, less Mozart and more Rachmaninoff, it was a wonderfully constructed literary piece and i am glad to have read it.
the book opens with Suzanne preparing dinner for her "family", her husband Ben, and her live-in best friend Petra and daughter Adele. the radio announces an airpla...more
the book opens with Suzanne preparing dinner for her "family", her husband Ben, and her live-in best friend Petra and daughter Adele. the radio announces an airpla...more
When Suzanne Sullivan learns of her lover Alex's death over the radio, it takes every ounce of willpower to continue making dinner for her family without letting on that something is out of the ordinary. Within a couple of weeks, she is contacted by Alex's wife Olivia, who demands she finish the musical composition her late husband was writing when he was having his affair with her. This proves to be a difficult task, one Suzanne has to complete while simultaneously tending to both her unhappy m...more
Reading Elise Blackwell, I am always struck by her intelligence. Her sentences are exquisitely crafted, and her stories are woven with obscure facts and details. In the case of An Unfinished Score, the lives of composers, both famous and forgotten, are used as a motif. Blackwell also reveals an understanding of classical music that is almost intimidating.
In an Unfinished Score, Suzanne Sullivan, violist in a struggling quartet, hears on the radio that her lover, a prominent composer, has just di...more
In an Unfinished Score, Suzanne Sullivan, violist in a struggling quartet, hears on the radio that her lover, a prominent composer, has just di...more
This has a bit of a split rating - **1/2 or ***1/2 depending on whether or not you've been a serious student of music. This is a novel written by a musical academic/professional classical musician about professional classical musicians, and, most appealingly, for them as well.
Without reiterating the plot, the viola jokes abound and the sections are presented as movements of a serious orchestral piece. I was drawn to this book because I have serious musical training in my background, my father wa...more
Without reiterating the plot, the viola jokes abound and the sections are presented as movements of a serious orchestral piece. I was drawn to this book because I have serious musical training in my background, my father wa...more
I love classical music, especially chamber music, so this book was a delightful backstage pass. What's it like to practice such music, to live under its spell, to wrestle with it, to let it into your life, to live and breathe it, and to try to make money from it as well? Grounded in the reality of a chamber group, the novel explores adultery, creativity, and secrets in a hypnotic voice. This one filled my weekend and I put everything aside to finish it. Now, if you're a mystery author as I am, o...more
While preparing dinner, concert violist Suzanne Sullivan hears on the radio that her long-term lover Alex—a well-known conductor—has perished in a plane crash. Living with her husband (a composer), her best friend Pertra (a concert violinist) and Petra’s deaf daughter Adele, Suzanne is forced to grieve in secret. With one foot in a dysfunctional marriage and one hand in the rearing of a child not her own, she comes to realize that it was during her stolen moments with Alex that she felt most who...more
Elise Blackwell's fourth novel is a slow, contemplative read that manages to penetrate the very basic of our thoughts and ideas with her sharp prose.
Click to read the full review on my book blog.
Click to read the full review on my book blog.
This was a touching work of fiction. It actually brought tears to my eyes near the end. The musical references were interesting, and the depictions of each character's relationship to music seemed honest and soulful. It reminded me in many ways of the movie "Unfaithful" with Richard Gere and Diane Lane. I loved it.
I absolutely adored this; it's flawed, I think, and a little predictable, and Suzanne is not necessarily an entirely sympathetic narrator, but it was heartbreaking and the way Blackwell writes about music is incredible.
Ma, you might dig this, since the protagonist almost has your name, and is also a viola player.
Ma, you might dig this, since the protagonist almost has your name, and is also a viola player.
May 01, 2013
Bluecat
marked it as calibre
Apr 17, 2013
Sue1958
marked it as to-read
There are no discussion topics on this book yet.
Be the first to start one »
Elise Blackwell is the author of three novels: Hunger, The Unnatural History of Cypress Parish, and Grub. Originally from southern Louisiana, she has lived all over the country and currently teaches at the University of South Carolina.
More about Elise Blackwell...
Share This Book
No trivia or quizzes yet. Add some now »

Loading...























