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Piano Mans Daughter Perennial
 
 

Piano Mans Daughter Perennial (Paperback)

by Timothy Findley (Author)
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
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Product Description

From Amazon.com

As the story opens, Lily, the heroine of Timothy Findley's Victorian-Gothic-style novel as seen through the narrative of her son Charlie, is ending her days in an asylum; her life unfolds as a Dickensian tale of deprivation and struggle between the feminine and the coldly masculine, leading to that "madwoman in the attic" denouement. Yet Charlie is reclaiming his mother's life through his loving telling of her story. "She could break your heart with that riveting gaze," he says. Music, vaudeville, and silent movies resonate through the lives in the novel, set in turn-of-the-century Toronto. Findley is a best-selling and award-winning Canadian writer, author of The Wars and Famous Last Words.


From Publishers Weekly

In the genus Novelist, there are several subspecies, including writer, teacher and storyteller. Findley is a storyteller. Winner of numerous honors (including Canada's Governor General's Award for Fiction, for The Wars), he is no spinner of wonderful words but, rather, an extraordinarily gifted teller of tales. As in his several other novels (most recently, Headhunter), here he imagines very particular, not at all common, folk. The focus is on Lily, who spends most of her brief life around the turn of the century touched by a hybrid of epilepsy, insanity and grace. Lily is conceived upon the first and only meeting of her mother, Ede, with an angelic traveling piano salesman named Tom; though fully intending to marry Ede, he dies "in a sea of horses" months before Lily's birth. Within a few years, Ede marries Tom's older brother and transforms into a proper, run-of-the-mill urban matriarch. Before long, Lily's condition is discovered. She is first locked in the attic whenever guests arrive, then sent off to a school for "different" girls?but not before she falls for a reasonable facsimile of her father, a Cinderella-like boy/man, nicknamed Lizzie, who is the much younger brother of Lily's father. Before the novel's end, Lizzie dies as well, as does another Tom, raising the only real problem in this otherwise wholly involving work: that the good too predictably die young. By way of extremely close interior perambulations through his characters in the mind and voice of Lily's son, Charlie, Findley views the image of the general through the lens of the particular, offering everything a reader could want from a vaguely romantic multigenerational saga. Film rights to Whoopi Goldberg.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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5 Reviews
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4.8 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars the mystery and dread of fatherhood, Jun 17 2004
By Lynn Harnett (Marathon, FL USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
The winner of numerous awards, Canadian author Findley shapes this 1996 novel around a young man's quest for his father and his dread of becoming a father himself.

Narrator Charlie Kilworth is the son of mad, beautiful, evervescent and tormented Lily Kilworth, who cannot or will not remember who Charlie's father is. It is her story Charlie tells, after her death in an asylum fire, a fire she may herself have set.

Lily's story begins before her birth, when her mother, Ede, meets an itinerant piano man. "The sight of him was like a match being struck," Ede recalls, beginning the incendiary allusions that punctuate the novel and haunt Lily's private world.

The piano man dies before he can wed Ede but eight years later she marries his brother, Frederick, an ambitious piano manufacturer whose one unorthodoxy is falling in love with Ede. He accepts Lily but without knowing of her affliction - severe epileptic seizures.

He is as repelled by Lily's epilepsy as Ede is frightened by it and becomes, for Lily, the demon of her childhood, the focus of rebellion and despair. But even though Frederick locks her in the attic whenever company is expected and finally banishes her to a school for difficult girls, Lily blossoms.

A beautiful, vibrant young woman, "hampered" not "handicapped" (the word makes her indignant) by her illness, she goes to England with a friend and it's there that Charlie is conceived. He knows only that the event occurred in January 1910 and he examines Lily's photos intently, imagining fathers, and questions her friends, adding pieces to the life she has already related to him.

Lily and Charlie return to Toronto before World War I but Frederick, outraged by Charlie's birth, refuses to see them. They begin a round of living in expensive hotels, going to dances where Charlie is always her partner, and seeing movies. For Charlie the life is a series of enchantments and nightmares as his mother's demons pursue her and drag him along. A child, he learns to watch over his mother although his dependency often renders him helpless.

When tragedy pushes Lily over the edge into madness, Charlie is liberated into normalcy - school, friends his own age, relatives. "It made a decent life - secure in ways I had never known." Lily emerges from the asylum but never permanently.

Charlie's voice is wistful, awed, admiring, impatient, petulant and wise. But it is Lily who colors and shapes the story, taking flight from her son's narration. Findley's writing is deeply atmosheric, enveloping the reader in the Canada of 1890 to 1920. He invites an intimacy with his characters (many not even touched on here) that creates a bond without violating their essential human secrecy.

A rewarding novel, which will linger in the mind.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Best Findley Yet, Aug 22 2007
By LW (London, ON) - See all my reviews
The Piano Man's daughter is a novel hard to put down. It is a much easier read than Findley's other novels, "Pilgrim" and "The Wars", but not any less detailed. The story of Lily and the characters she encounters is uplifting, frightening as well as heartbreaking. Findley provides a very accurate portrayal of what it is like to live with a mental illness and never glamourizes or ridicules Lily Killworth's condition.

Those who enjoy this book as much as I do will most likely also enjoy Findley's story "Pilgrim" as there are many similarities between the two.

Happy reading!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars What a wonderful discovery, Aug 19 2009
By Beverly Greenfield "Constant Reader" (Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I can't believe I have lived to be 62 and had never read any of the wonderous books of Canadian author, the now deceased Timothy Findley. Until now.

I just finished The Piano Man's Daughter and I can't wait to read it again.

This book is written almost like a fairy tale, a magical story of tragedy, love, miracles, family, poetry, music and adventure. It encompasses so many facets of humanness - the wonderful young girl that was Ede who brought her baby into the world in a field of flowers; Lily who suffered much but also saw the magic of things most of us will never see; Charlie, his mother Lily's companion and protector, wise far beyond his years. So many more characters were given life by this wonderful author, and the ending made me believe that Mr. Findley wanted to hang on to the writing of this book just as I wanted it never to end. My only comfort in reading the last page was knowing I have another of his creations, Not Wanted On The Voyage, waiting to be read.

Mr. Findley, I thank you for sharing your wonderful stories with the world.
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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful Tale of a Mother's Madness
I've read very few books by Timothy Findley it's a bit hard to find his works here where I live. And have to rely much on Amazon or other online bookstores to find his works... Read more
Published on Mar 26 2002 by Sassi Angel

4.0 out of 5 stars My first dip into Timothy Findley: Thumbs Up
I was charmed by this book. It's a great story with strong characters, interesting themes and an evocative setting of turn-of-the-century Toronto. Read more
Published on Aug 2 2001

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