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Last Night at the Blue Angel
A Novel
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی
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Andrus Nichols and Caitlin Davies share the narration of this motherdaughter story, set primarily in Chicago in 1965. Nichols infuses her performance with a soft, dreamy quality, which is appropriate for jazz singer Naomi's memories of the postwar years, when she was forced to face the consequences of acting on her instincts. Davies's performance is more lively, befitting the chapters told from the perspective of 10-year-old Sophia. These two different approaches work well together, emphasizing the contrast between the ambitious yet dependent Naomi and the more practical but fearful Sophia as they face an uncertain future and prepare for Naomi's last gig at a run-down club. Listeners will be fully engaged by this story of church, sexuality, the pursuit of art, and the meaning of family. C.B.L. © AudioFile 2014, Portland, Maine
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April 21, 2014
Set in mid-1960s Chicago, Rotert’s debut depicts Naomi Hill’s struggles to succeed as a jazz singer, largely from the perspective of her young daughter, Sophia. “Mother is a singer. I live in her dark margin. For the first ten years of my life, I watch her from the wings.” A reckless single mother, Naomi believes in living in the moment and depends on her friends to help care for Sophia. The girl grows up in an erratic lifestyle revolving around Naomi’s club act at the titular Blue Angel. The stress Sophia already feels as a result of their unpredictable routine is heightened by school civil defense drills, which leave her feeling anxious about the threat of nuclear warfare. However, she has an ability beyond her age to understand her mother’s flaws while still being able to cherish their relationship. In flashbacks told from Naomi’s point of view, the woman reflects on what drove her to flee her Kansas hometown in the 1950s and what drives her to pursue the spotlight. Rotert has created a complicated and engaging heroine in Sophia, a memorable character portrait which is her book’s most striking aspect. Agent: Henry Dunow, Dunow, Carlson & Lerner.
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February 1, 2014
Set in tumultuous early 1960s Chicago, at a time when the jazz scene was thriving, this debut novel stars emerging jazz singer Naomi and her anxious young daughter, Sophia. Naomi, a headliner at the Blue Angel club for almost ten years who has made the cover of Look magazine, is a talented but destructive woman, and Sophie has grown up too fast, with her only real source of stability a man desperately in love with her mother. It's not every debut that gets a 100,000-copy first printing, and there's major outreach to book clubs as well.
Copyright 2014 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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Starred review from May 1, 2014
Rotert's astonishing debut novel opens with ten-year-old Sophia sitting behind the dusty velvet curtains at Chicago's Blue Angel Jazz Club. She peeks out at the audience, yearning to be noticed. But it's the singer, her mother, Naomi, who's center stage, the place that she was born to be. Naomi is single-mindedly focused on achieving fame, and therein lies the conflict for Sophie and everyone else caught up in Naomi's thrall. Her daughter, her lovers, and her best friend, Jim, though complex, nuanced characters, are just bit players in her entourage. Naomi may seem abusive, living as she does in a run-down hotel, keeping Sophie out half the night at the Blue Angel, entertaining various men and women until morning, and using the deeply smitten photographer Jim as dad, cook, and housekeeper. We begin to understand better when Rotert shows us Naomi's 1950s Kansas childhood, during which her siblings worked the farm and a dissident teacher, Sister Idalia, recognized Naomi's potential, encouraging her musical talent. This, too, is where Naomi fell in love with Laura, sparking a scandal that would reverberate over the next 20 years. VERDICT Rotert's musical background informs Naomi's passion for performance, but it is her heartbreaking portrait of Sophie, so wise yet so vulnerable, that readers will remember long after the final page. [See Prepub Alert, 1/10/14.]--Sally Bissell, formerly with Lee Cty. Lib. Syst., Fort Myers, FL
Copyright 2014 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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Starred review from June 15, 2014
A debut novel about a nightclub singer preoccupied with her own desires and a young daughter who yearns for her love.Ten-year-old Sophia Hill knows her mother's life is about to change as she watches her final performance at the Blue Angel. Naomi's picture now graces the cover of Look magazine, and she's famous. Naomi has achieved her goal, but Sophia's dream is different: She just wants her mother's love. It's 1965, and Sophia lives in a Chicago motel with Naomi, meticulously documenting the comings and goings of the men and women who spend time in her mother's bedroom, including a couple of guests from the past. She doesn't fully grasp the meaning behind all of Naomi's visitors, but Sophia is wise beyond her years in many ways. Surrounded by adults who've always protected and indulged her mother, she's never experienced a normal family life. Instead, her days and nights revolve around Naomi's needs, and she worries that her mother will leave her behind the same way she imagines Naomi left her own parents. However, unbeknownst to Sophia, Naomi's life has been one of turmoil and deprivation. One of seven children born in poverty in Kansas, she was a rambunctious student until a teacher recognized her talent and encouraged her to sing. After graduating from high school, she was forced to leave town after becoming sexually involved with the daughter of a prominent community leader, sparking a complicated future with regard to relationships. Telling the story from Sophia's and Naomi's distinct perspectives, Rotert creates an expressive and haunting narrative highlighting Sophia's innocent vulnerability and her mother's single-minded obsession. Though the characters are very different, the author's interpretation of both emerges spot-on. And, while Naomi's journey is interesting, Sophia's story hooks the reader from the beginning and dominates, particularly as the final chapters unfold.A tale that's poignant, poetic and heart-wrenching throughout.
COPYRIGHT(2014) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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Starred review from May 15, 2014
Set in mid-1960s Chicago, this impressive debut novel tells the story of 10-year-old Sophia and her mother, Naomi. With chapters alternating between the two characters' perspectives, Rotert paints a moving portrait of a tumultuous yet tender mother-daughter relationship. Naomi, a talented and very troubled jazz singer, performs at a past-its-prime nightclub while trying to catch her big break. Irresponsible and selfish (yet somehow likable and sympathetic), she drinks too much and hosts a variety of lovers in the hotel apartment she shares with her daughter. In flashbacks to Naomi's childhood in rural Kansas, we learn of the painful past that both shaped and haunts her. Sophia essentially serves as her mother's caretaker. Kindhearted and wise beyond her years, she obsesses about nuclear destruction and keeps a list of things that must be reinvented once it happens. Sadly, a normal childhood is forever beyond her grasp. With lush prose and well-drawn characters, this heartbreaking novel of love, loss, and the redemptive power of music also offers a satisfying glimpse of Chicago at a pivotal point in history.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2014, American Library Association.)
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