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The Song of the Lark (Paperback)

by Willa Cather (Author), Doris Grumbach (Author) "DOCTOR HOWARD ARCHIE had just come up from a game of pool with the Jewish clothier and two travelling men who happened to be staying..." (more)
Key Phrases: babe sie verloren, grape arbour, Doctor Archie, Miss Kronborg, Ray Kennedy (more...)
3.9 out of 5 stars See all reviews (42 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

Review
'A tremendous, ranging story, economical and distilled as poetry, fast moving, rich and short. A mighty subject. A lovely book' JANE GARDAM of DEATH COMES FOR THE ARCHBISHOP 'Willa Cather makes a world which is burningly alive, sometimes lovely, often tragic' HELEN DUNMORE 'In her writing, an almost bardic ability to hold us with stories coexists with a blazing commitment to a moral view of human distinction and human turpitude that recalls Wharton without the cynicism and Conrad without the weightiness ... Her voice, laconical and richly sensuous, sings out with a note of unequivocal love for the people she is setting down on the page' MARINA WARNER --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Review
"To reread Cather is the rediscover an arresting chapter in the national past."
--Los Angeles Times --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

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Customer Reviews

42 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.9 out of 5 stars (42 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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33 of 33 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant American book, December 27, 2003
By Patricia A. Powell (gladstone, nj USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)      
This is the first novel that I have read by Willa Cather, and so I began my reading with no specific expectations. What I found was an extraordinary American writer. Her descriptions, and her ability to sum up the lifetime of a character in just a few sentences or lines are unlike the writings of anyone else I have read. She reminds me most of Henry James, although she is easier to read..

Thea, the subject of this early Willa Cather novel is flawed, and not really a heroine at all. She is an artist; her art is music. Her family and neighbors in Moonstone Colorado barely recognize what this means; most just find her odd. Thea is a loner. She has no friends her own age. Her siblings do not like her. But, she is the subject of attention from the town doctor, a railroad worker, a drunkard piano teacher, and Mexican laborers. All recognize something special in her; all contribute to her early struggle to find her art, and herself.

It is a railroad accident that changes her life. When her friend, Ray Kennedy, dies in a railroad accident, he leaves Thea a $600 inheritance. These funds take her to Chicago to study piano. There she struggles in poverty, and is discouraged, but she also gets her first glimpse of who she is as an artist.

This is a timeless story about struggle. What does it take to be an artist? What does the artistic commitment mean? Thea does not visit her mother before her death because she had a special opportunity to sing a Wagnerian part in Germany. Her response seems selfish, and uncaring. Her sweetheart turns out to be unavailable, he is unhappily married. Thea has little personal life; people are somewhat incidental to her. Her life models that of a true artist. The normal relations that most people need to thrive, are peripheral to her life as an artist. It is that devotion to the art of singing that fills her life.

At the time of this writing, Song of the Lark is number 40,604 on Amazon.com's best selling list. As a brilliant American writer, Cather seems to have been somewhat but not completely overlooked. Perhaps this is because she was a contemporary of Hemingway, and Fitzgerald, both of whom were such public figures. Many of their works were transferred to the silver screen. Perhaps it is due to her gender. Regardless of the reason for this, she is an author worth discovering, and worth reading. I highly recommend the Song of the Lark.

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27 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The emergence of an American artist--Cather style., August 13, 1998
By joemaurer@aol.com (Los Angeles, CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Song of the Lark (Hardcover)
For some reason, this is a Cather novel that sometimes goes unnoticed, given the popularity of OH PIONEERS! and MY ANTONIA. But don't overlook it. It's a thinly veiled autobiography of the emergence of a female artist in America at the turn of the Century. Cather had met a famous Wagnerian opera singer, who inspired the character of Thea Kronborg....but this is really Cather's own tale. The story of a young girl, growing up at the edge of the known world, in this case, Moonstone, Colorado, doubling for Cather's own Nebraska home town. It's about the influences on her life, her mother, the men who surround and protect her--sensing that she has a special gift that needs nurturance. And, ultimately, it's about that emergence--as the character goes from being a sturdy Swedish immigrant child to "The Great Kronborg," a Wagnerian opera Diva on the stages of Europe. The novel contains many memorable characters--and a transformation scene in Arizona that is among the most important in Cather's work. It's also deeply moving. For anyone who loves American literature, it should not be missed.
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29 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A portrait of the diva as a young woman, March 9, 2005
Behind "The Song of the Lark" is a true story, which James Woodress presents in his fine biography of Willa Cather. In 1913, working on a piece for McClure's magazine, Cather interviewed the opera star Olive Fremstad, who had been born in Sweden and raised in Minnesota. By coincidence, the night of their first meeting, Cather went to see a production at the Met; right before the performance was to begin, the director learned that the lead singer had fallen into a dead faint. With only minutes to prepare for the role, Fremstad agreed to fill in, and Cather was amazed that the tired, faded, unapproachable star she interviewed earlier in the day had somehow transformed herself into "a vision of dazzling youth and beauty."

From this kernel grew the story of Thea Kronborg, the heroine of "The Song of the Lark," which is Cather's portrait of the diva as a young woman. The first part, "Friends of Childhood," is standard bildungsroman fare: a young farm girl from a large family in Moonstone, Colorado, grows up and moves to the big city--in this case, Chicago--to pursue her dreams. The early sections of the book are pure Cather: a strong-headed yet friendly young girl surrounded by a colorful cast of multi-ethnic characters, from the anonymous tramp who drowns himself in the water tank to her alcohol-fueled German music teacher to the lively free-spirits living in the Mexican section of town. Nearly a novel unto itself, this opening section sketches the entire town of Moonstone with a multiplicity of tragicomic details

When Thea moves to Chicago, however, both her character and the book's tone changes. Initially her studies go well, but she finds her artistic growth chained by the expectations of the folks back home. Her awakening occurs when she travels to the American Southwest and stays near the ancient dwellings of the cave-dwellers; her removal from the influence of her Moonstone family and the stress of her Chicago education results in her emotional breakthrough. Thea realizes she will find success only after she has stripped away the vestiges of her countrified upbringing and forfeited her life, her friends, even her self to her art. Thea offers explains this sacrifice in terms similar to what the real-life Olive Fremstad told Cather: "It takes you up, and uses you, and spins you out; and that is your life. Not much else can happen to you."

"The Song of the Lark" melds two seemingly disparate literary traditions: the Western realism of the book's first half recalls Sinclair Lewis and the drawing-room sophistication of the later sections evokes Edith Wharton. (I was surprised by how much the first two sections reminded me of Dreiser's "Sister Carrie."). The disparity was intentional: Cather's premise is that the artist must completely transform herself if she expects to shake the dust off her childhood moccasins and step into the heels of an artiste. Similarly, that very transformation (and the length required to present it) is what makes Cather's novel so difficult for many readers: in order to become a star, Thea turns into a self-centered prima donna, a character who may be admirable but who is not always very likeable.

Incidentally, there are two very different versions of "Song of the Lark" available. Most editions reprint the 1915 text, since it is in the public domain. This earlier version is far more detailed and, some have argued, overwritten; her British publisher complained that she "told everything about everyone." For the 1932 Autograph Edition, Cather revised the book substantially, cutting it by seven thousand words and streamlining the overall text. Descriptive passages were pared; Thea's and Fred Ottenburg's roles were altered; and style, opinion, and matters of taste were polished and modernized. This version is still under copyright restriction, and I believe it is available only in the Mariner Books (Houghton Mifflin) edition. The original version is regarded by many readers and scholars as better (and certainly truer to Cather's original intent); this is the book that Mencken praised for its "sharp bits of observation, sly touches of humor, [and] gestures of that gentle pity which is the fruit of understanding."
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars The selfishness trap
I am really shocked at the number of reviewers who criticize Thea, our heroine, for being selfish and unlikable--many of these reviewers women. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Gail Dohrmann

2.0 out of 5 stars Yawn!
.Thankfully Cather discovered you can do more with less (The Professor's House and Death Comes for the Archbishop) but the novel was sleep-inducing. It's too long. Read more
Published 3 months ago by Anthony Marray

5.0 out of 5 stars Penguin edition great resource for students & teachers.
ISBN 0-14-118104-4 This annotated Penguin edition of Willa Cather's Kunstlerroman is an invaluable resource for students & teachers providing information at first hand. Read more
Published 9 months ago by I. Caruso

5.0 out of 5 stars A novel about artistic development
The Song of the Lark is Willa Cather's somewhat autobiographical novel about artistic growth.

It follows the life of a fictional opera singer, Thea Kronborg, as she... Read more
Published 13 months ago by Catherine K. Brown

5.0 out of 5 stars the song of the lark...written by the lark
made me cry...and I dont cry. full of her love of the land, and her annoyance with the men who farm it.
Published 16 months ago by Harrington V. Ingham

4.0 out of 5 stars An engrossing, harmonious story
The Song of the Lark was Cather's third novel. Written between O Pioneers! and My Antonia, it is very different from those novels for which Cather is better known. Read more
Published 16 months ago by Laura McDonald

3.0 out of 5 stars Insipid
The penguin classic editions are sure nice little books. It's my first Wila Cather book and I was expecting much more (actually not more, but better) from the reviews I've read... Read more
Published 17 months ago by Quilmiense

5.0 out of 5 stars A Story of Achievement
This is a brilliant and readable novel about the struggles of an artist and the friends who helped her along the way. Read more
Published on July 2, 2007 by vampsandtramps

5.0 out of 5 stars Perfectly Written
I love Cather's work, and The Song of the Lark may be the best one of her books I've read yet...Death Come for the Archbishop has been my favorite of her books for so long that I... Read more
Published on October 4, 2006 by Leslie Butler

3.0 out of 5 stars Somewhat Disappointing This Time.
I love O Pioneers and My Antonia. What happened here? Willa Cather is a wonderful storyteller with so much vitality and so many interesting people in wonderfully pictorial... Read more
Published on September 13, 2006 by Reviews No More

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