MARIA ANNA MOZART
This post is part of Nonfiction Monday
hosted today by Shelf-employed
Random House
(pub. 2.8.2011)
(pub. 2.8.2011)
32 pages
A True Tale with A Cherry On Top
A uthor: Elizabeth Rusch
and Paintings by Steve Johnson and Lou Fancher
C haracter: Maria Anna Mozart
O verview from publisher:
C haracter: Maria Anna Mozart
O verview from publisher:
"By the time she was 12, she was considered one of the finest pianists in Europe, but today few people know her name. Maria Mozart, like her famous brother Wolfgang, was a musical prodigy. The talented siblings toured Europe, playing before kings and empresses ... They were best friends, collaborators, and confidantes. As they grew older, Wolfgang was encouraged to pursue his musical ambitions, while Maria was told she must stop performing and, ultimately, marry. But she was determined to continue playing the piano every day, for the love of music."
T antalizing taste: "The house was silent, but Maria and Wolfgang imagined a symphony that sounded like laughter, like whispering secrets in three languages, like children at a court dance."
and something more: Elizabeth Rusch, the author of this fascinating picture book biography, For the Love of Music, writes in her author's note (called the "Encore" in keeping with telling the story in sonata form): "When she was in her seventies, Maria [Anna Mozart] went blind and lost the use of her left hand. But she continued to play her piano, the very instrument she and Wolfgang had played together as children... Found on the piano were scores from her brother's operas Don Giovanni and The Magic Flute, probably the last music she every played." One wonders what pieces of her own might have been found resting on her piano if Maria had been given the same opportunities as her brother to pursue her musical talent.
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