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Notorious Dr. August: His Real Life and Crimes
  

Notorious Dr. August: His Real Life and Crimes (Turtleback)

by Christopher Bram (Author) "LIFE is eternal, but lives are short ..." (more)
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (27 customer reviews)

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From Publishers Weekly

Encompassing dramatic shifts in place and time, from the end of the Civil War to the heyday of Coney Island, this sprawling, splendidly imagined novel dramatizes Victorian age yet eminently familiar dilemmas of race, spirituality and sexual identity through the unforgettable journey of a wonderfully motley cast of characters. The eponymous pianist-cum-spiritualist, Augustus Fitzwilliam "Fitz" Boyd, first meets Isaac Kemp, his lifelong love, on a Civil War battlefield, where teenage Isaac is a slave accompanying his master's son. Augustus, himself only 14, has been captured after playing the flute to entertain the Union troops. When both boys are set free, they take off for New York, where, after various vicissitudes, clever, enterprising Isaac becomes Fitz's manager, traveling with him to his s ance-like piano concerts all over the world. Eventually, to Fitz's chagrin, Isaac takes a white wife, Alice Pangborn, a puritanical New England bluestocking. Soon the couple's two children are also traveling as part of the entourage of "Dr. August." At the height of his popularity, Fitz performs for the privileged classes on an international circuit; both the cultural landscape and the musical selections are detailed with beguiling immediacy. Though the surroundings are glamorous, Fitz and his clan find it difficult to make ends meet. So when they are invited to stay in Constantinople with an old acquaintance of Fitz's, once a whore and now a wealthy widow, they seize the chanceDbut a tragedy tests the bonds that hold their most unconventional family together. Bram (Father of Frankenstein; Almost History) tells his story through Fitz's own recollections asDlate in lifeDhe dictates his candid memoirs to Isaac's son, who has never known the full story of his family. Informed by sources as disparate as Ricky Jay's Learned Pigs and Fireproof Women and Edmund Wilson's Patriotic Gore, this provocative, imaginative exploration is generously endowed with evocative period details and rich characterizations of people from all walks of life. 6-city author tour. (June) FYI: Father of Frankenstein was the basis of the movie Gods and Monsters.
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

From Library Journal

It is difficult to summarize this latest work from Bram (Father of Frankenstein) without sounding tawdry and doing a disservice to his thought-provoking exploration of the human soul. Narrated by the effete Fitz Boyd, who works under the stage name of Dr. August in New York, Paris, London, and Constantinople, the novel ostensibly describes the life of an improvisational pianist working as a musician of the metaphysical, employing chicanery and parlor tricks to capitalize on the 19th-century fascination with the spirit world. But the novel is much more than that, using the complex relationships among Fitz, former slave Isaac Kemp, and Kemp's Caucasian wife, Alice, to explore the meaning of freedom. It is the challenge of discovering whether any one of us can be free of the past and choose the future that stands in such stark contrast to Dr. August's vaudeville tricks, making the novel such a complex and compelling read. Recommended for most collections.DCaroline M. Hallsworth, Sudbury P.L., Ont.
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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Customer Reviews

27 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (27 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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1.0 out of 5 stars Tedious Dr. August, Sep 10 2003
"The Notorious Dr. August" is one of the few books I've read this year that I regret finishing. My instinct was to jump ship as soon as the clumsily woven-in Alice diaries began, and that was a good instinct. Things never quite recovered after that, and I ended up disliking the book and all its major characters. I can enjoy a book without sympathetic characters, but Fitz and Alice and Isaac didn't engage me for very long; each one was tedious in a different way. I remember admiring "Father of Frankenstein," but I found this foray of Bram's into Victorian melodrama often insufferable. His "big fat historical novel" (as he described it to a New York book group) retains many of melodrama's faults: a scramble of thin, exotic settings; laughably contrived plot twists; reams of overheated, cliched dialogue; a narrator who explains and explains. The Victorians were like that, Fitz remarks, "All those words!" A right enough observation, but that isn't license to dump another fresh load of them: his chatter goes on for five hundred pages. In addtion to this, Bram largely brushes off a confusing decision to have his narrator address his listener (who is also a character in the story) in both the second- and third-person; it doesn't work. The book had lots of promise; I thought I was in for something excellent. But I soon realized that like its protagonist, "The Notorious Dr. August" is more or less a fake.
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1.0 out of 5 stars Aside from the point, what did I miss?, July 14 2003
By A Customer
After reading the reviews of this book, I had high expectations. As it turned out, the main characters had so many ununexplained quirks and hang-ups that, by the end, I couldn't have cared less who ended up with whom--or didn't. The era and settings should have been interesting, but so many of the characteristics and actions of Dr. August, his love interest and his love interest's wife were so vaguely explained (if at all) that the reader wondered how any of the characters could have stood each other had they really existed.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Music to the Eyes, July 7 2002
By Michael S. Waren "schoeder" (Chicago, IL USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Christopher Bram is one of my favorite writers and his talent is displayed excellently here. I must admit at first, I was not excited about reading this Civil War era novel, but once I started it I was taken over and captivated until the last page. Some books you forget soon after you finished them, but this novel still stays with me. The story revolves around a man named Dr. August, his fellow slave (and one time lover)Issac Kemp who loses his heart to a white governess, Alice Pangbourn. It appears at times that Dr. August is a brillant con man using his audiences to pray on their weaknesses. In parts of the book, there are the presence of "Spirits" that take over the piano playing of Dr. August. (Which I like since you are never truly sure of fact and fiction.) This book works on so many levels: racism, class, sexuality and the true spirit of human love, that to go one about each one would lead to a review that goes on for pages and pages. I would love to see this book as a television minseries and I think it would sell. Read this book, you will not be disappointed and you will soon see the talent of an amazing, wonderful storyteller and writer.
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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars I love this Book!
A brilliant story line set in the post Civil War era. Deals with racism and homophobia of the time, as well as comlex feelings. Lisez davantage
Published on Jun 8 2002 by D. Casto

4.0 out of 5 stars A truly great book: it's worth putting up with its flaws
So much is wrong with this book that that in itself adds to its indisputable stature. It is a tribute to Bram's genius as a writer that he gets away with a plot as twisted and... Lisez davantage
Published on May 13 2002 by MartinP

5.0 out of 5 stars Completely Captivating!
I was so engrossed in following the story of Dr. August's unique life that I neglected to make dinner and stayed up until 3am to finish it in one sitting. Lisez davantage
Published on Aug 17 2001 by Kelly A. Eucher

5.0 out of 5 stars Absolutely enchanting!
A unique and interesting love story from start to finish. Bram's style flows beautifully and I found myself not wanting to put the book down even when I turned the last page. Lisez davantage
Published on Aug 7 2001 by cricket27

4.0 out of 5 stars Great read
This is my first Bram novel and I must say I was very impressed. I will certainly read his past novels. Lisez davantage
Published on Jun 12 2001 by William O'Connor

5.0 out of 5 stars An amazing writer
You know, when you just look at the plot of the book, it seems so far-fetched that its implausibility would be distracting. Lisez davantage
Published on Jan 5 2001

5.0 out of 5 stars Glorious love song
This is the fourth book by Bram I've read, and his writing is just getting better! I found the story utterly captivating and compelling. Lisez davantage
Published on Nov 11 2000 by blissengine

5.0 out of 5 stars One of my Favorite Books...I'll have to admit...
The author of this book was unknown to me. Now, I'll seek him out. This book will certainly become a motion picture someday. Lisez davantage
Published on Oct 17 2000 by Michael J. Armijo

5.0 out of 5 stars A novel of Epic scope yet wondrously intimate
Christopher Bram has written perhaps the most unique and adventurous novel of the new century. By his own closing page note he attributes his inspiration for this amazing novel... Lisez davantage
Published on Sep 23 2000 by Grady Harp

3.0 out of 5 stars Beautifully written, but...
It really is a terrific book, until perhaps 2/3 of the way through. The writing is elegant and the story compelling. But then the characters begin to wear thin. Lisez davantage
Published on Sep 21 2000 by R. Schumann

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