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22 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars i was hooked on it the moment i turned to the first page..
This is my first Barbara Trepido book- And i'm absolutely delighted with it! The different storytellers in the book brings to life the plot with their personal narration. Each spin their part of the tale by recounting their life experiences, and this culminates in an intricately woven plot littered with unexpected revelations that fit perfectly together like lost...
Published on June 17, 1999

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Interesting story lines.....
I found this book a little hard to read. Friends I have lent it to have given up reading it. I HAVE to finish a book I start .... so I did. But it wasn't easy. There were a few story lines going on simultaneously which I found a little confusing. I had to go back & check who was who & what happened when.... BUT with that said - I did enjoy the book despite it being a...
Published on March 4, 2009 by Helen T. Diehl


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22 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars i was hooked on it the moment i turned to the first page.., June 17, 1999
By A Customer
This is my first Barbara Trepido book- And i'm absolutely delighted with it! The different storytellers in the book brings to life the plot with their personal narration. Each spin their part of the tale by recounting their life experiences, and this culminates in an intricately woven plot littered with unexpected revelations that fit perfectly together like lost pieces of a jigsaw puzzle. As the plot unfolds, the characters' lives unfold before us, and one cannot help but feel for them and even relating to them. Bizarre and almost exotic their lives may be, yet there are qualities in Barbara's characters that the reader can identify with. In the midst of admiring them for their talent and beauty, we pity Ellen for the loss of her sister; we wonder at, yet understand Katherine's maniacal zeal in caring for her daughter; we shrug at Stella's fragile sense of insecurity and over-commitment to her boyfriend. Barbara explores love, loss and betrayal, death, lonliness and ingratitude in her quirky and comical manner, interspersed with allusions to Wilheim Muller and Conrad which seem to be the connecting thread throughout the novel. The plot comes full circle, the ending even if a little too coincidental, pulls the curtains on this story to a splendid close, deserving of a standing ovation.
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Intriguing, yet warm and personal - beautifully written, January 18, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: The Travelling Hornplayer (Paperback)
"The Travelling Hornplayer" is the first I've read of Barbara Trapido's and it won't be the last. It's such a pleasure reading this finely written yet understated gem of novel I didn't want it to end. It's hard to describe the type of novel TH is because it's got all the elements of mystery, intrigue, personal tragedy, loss and betrayal that provide the natural ingredients for a great novel but it is only in Trapido's expert hands that all these elements come together to produce a finely judged and balanced whole. The novel is personal, warm and engaging. Her characters - without exception, down to the minor ones - are brilliantly defined and come to life. They leap out at you from the pages like real human beings because they're neither good nor bad, just people with all their frailties. Recounted in flashback and by rotation through the eyes of Ellen, Jonathan and Stella, Trapido weaves together personal contemplation, plot development and social commentary into a complex mosaic of splendour and intrigue. Lydia, a ghost-like figure hovering over the proceedings, is the catalyst for the novel's dramatic development. She is also the glue that binds the loose pieces together. Trapido's genius is to engineer a denouement that is emotionally congruent, satisfying and uplifting. Amidst the avalanche of new titles being published each week, it is easy to miss this wonderfully little gem of a novel. It would have escaped my attention had it not won the Whitbread Prize award. Please don't miss it. "The Travelling Hornplayer" deserves to be read by all who love good literature.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars From the first pages, this book was pure joy., March 28, 1999
I felt almost as thought P. G. Wodehouse had been reincarnated in the body of a 90's woman, so droll and sly is the humor and intelligence of the main characters, even as they deal with all the traditional and contemporary tragedies--accidental death, AIDS, crib death, suicide, dyslexia, adultery. The story revolves around the tragic death of a young girl, 17-year old Lydia Dent, and how each of the characters come to be directly or indirectly involved in her death, without realizing it or knowing each other until the beautiful tapestry of this plot brings them together. Excellent book
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An unforgettable book, period!, October 26, 2001
This is the first of Trapido's novels I've read and I confess to being thoroughly smitten. This is, to put it oddly, the most beautifully structured novel I've read in many years. There's sixteen-year-old Lydia Dent, who is very close to her one-year-older sister, Ellen. There's Jonathan the Novelist, on whom Lydia develops a serious crush . . . and outside whose flat she is run over by an automobile. There's Jonathan's daughter, Stella the Nuisance Chip, who grows from a very unpromising childhood into an astonishingly beautiful and talented musician. Ellen, Jonathan, and Stella take turns telling the story, each from a quite different viewpoint, and being interrupted occasionally by an omniscient narrator who makes sure the reader is aware of certain things. These key characters are extremely well developed and you'll know them intimately by the end of the book, but even the supporting cast are multi-dimensional: Pen Massingham, the wealthy young Catholic schoolmate of Ellen's and Stella's; Izzy, the thoroughly disgusting young artist of genius; Ellen's and Lydia's stepmother (known to them as The Stepmother); Jonathan's wife, Katherine, who has dedicated her life to her daughter; Sonia, the brilliant and vivacious lover-turned friend -- even Jonathan's younger siblings are drawn believably and with great care. I often imagine how a novel I enjoy could be redone as a film script -- since novels and scripts are very different forms of literature -- but this is one time I'll take a pass. There's absolutely nothing in this very funny, very touching novel that could be excised without fatally damaging all the rest of it. Trapido goes on my permanent "watch" list.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars stunning, March 21, 1999
By A Customer
Trapido's collection of characters, as intelligent and witty as we'd like to be in real life, seem to come full circle in this latest novel. with amazing and stunning twists and turns ultimately it feels as if you are catching up on the interesting parts of peoples lifetimes, meeting old friends. sexy in an understated way and genuinely moving over all, this is a book i have read so many times and cannot recommend highly enough.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars read "Brother of the More Famous Jack" first., February 10, 2001
By 
Sarah_Aliza (New England, United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Travelling Hornplayer (Paperback)
I was so happy to read this book. I loved "Brother of the More Famous Jack" and I was really excited to see that Barbara Trapido decided to keep developing the characters of Jonathan and Katherine. It is well worth your while to track down a copy of "Brother". It is for sale at Amazon.co.uk and bibliofind.com. This was a book that has stayed with me for a long time. I don't want to give away any details about the book, so I will only say "read it!"
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Superb!, January 15, 2002
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This review is from: The Travelling Hornplayer (Paperback)
I bless the day that I stumbled on Barbara Trapido's work. I have just finished The Travelling Hornplayer for a second time, and it is just as wonderful. The characters are complete, and they way they flow from one to the other in the story is the work of an artist. Twists, tragedy, comedy, family, friendship--it's all there in a book of such seamlessly written prose. Read this book if you want a new novelist to treasure and a story that stays with you when the book is on the shelf. The Travelling Hornplayer is a stunning book.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Delightful follow-up dealing with loss, love, joy and genius, September 23, 1998
By A Customer
The Travelling Hornplayer takes up, thematically at least, where Brother of the More Famous Jack left off. Trapido succeeds in breathing new life into the familiar characters of the former novel, a generation down the line.

Without revealing too much of the storyline, this novel focuses on loss -- death of a family member, loss of one's own youth, the potential loss of one's marriage -- without being maudlin. In fact, the tone is quirky and the messages life-affirming. The central character (if there is one) is Stella, daughter of Jonathan and Katherine (the lovers of Brother of the More Famous Jack). Stella is truly stellar: a talented cellist, dyslexic and unsocialised, over-coddled and resentful; apparently 'above' her peers. This novels tracks her life and loves in parallel with those of her father, who has matured into an acclaimed novellist. Katherine, having recovered from the trauma of the cot-death of her first child (in Brother of the More Famous Jack) has become an over-protective mother, and an amateur interior decorator: Jonathan says that after a year in a new house 'everything was so beautiful I just wanted to spend all day drinking tea and looking at the walls'.

The style is witty and quick, and the handling of tricky subjects like death, adultery, HIV and the mother-daughter relationship is tender. If you like Trapido, you'll love this one!

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars a charming, haunting masterpiece, June 8, 2003
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"The Travelling Hornplayer" is for anyone who's ever fallen in love or had their heart broken, found a new friend or mourned a death. It's an intricate, complex, beautiful novel told from the shifting points of view of its characters, each of whom is himself shifting. Together they form a constellation of flawed geniuses and selfish empaths, drifting through a world that moves them into endless configurations. "The Travelling Hornplayer" is about the ripples we make in the world, how they affect those around us in ways we don't anticipate, how sometimes they double back and affect us. How that shadow disappearing around a corner is sometimes a stranger, and sometimes a friend and sometimes a lover and sometimes our parent, and sometimes we're looking into a funhouse mirror and it's ourself we saw. It's a book about an essay about a symphony about a poem. It's a book about writers and students and children and mothers, lovers and artists and spies, murder and mourning and sex and blue flowers. It's a novel perfect for anyone who loves books and everyone who loves life, and I recommend it without reservation.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A beautiful,touching novel, January 30, 2001
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This review is from: The Travelling Hornplayer (Paperback)
This book really struck me. Not only was it beautifully written, but it was funny, clever, thought-provoking, sad.... I couldn't put it down and didn't want it to end.

Unfortunately, several of her previous books are out of print, but I do have "Temples of Delight", which is wonderful as well.

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The Travelling Hornplayer
The Travelling Hornplayer by Barbara Trapido (Paperback - February 1, 2000)
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