The Song of the Lark (Penguin Classics)
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| The Song of the Lark (Penguin Classics) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The beautiful and lyrical third novel by Willa Cather follows the life of Thea Kronberg from her childhood in 19th-century Nebraska to her career as a renowned Opera singer. A rich and atmospheric work from this great American novelist.
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In this novel Willa Cather presents Thea Kronberg, a minister's daughter, living with her family in Moonstone, Colorado. After enrolling Thea for piano lessons, Mrs. Kronberg is told that her daughter's true talent is in the beauty of her voice when her teacher hears her sing in church. Thea leaves home to study music in Chicago where she is unaware of the city's hurrying crowds, glittering shops, and loitering men, and is drawn to the art museum and concert hall. Her ambition to become an operatic artist is set in motion, and though she is completely preoccupied with the emotional and intellectual demands put on her by the arduous training required to achieve her goal, she withstands the grueling regimen. She finds a guardian and love interest in Fred Ottenburg who sends her to Arizona to become rejuvenated. Once there she learns to submit to the physical experience and, at the same time, to control the reaction. Ten years later the reader meets Thea who has just returned from Germany and is the leading soprano of the Metropolitan Opera. Sometimes she is tempted by marriage, but art always comes before any other attraction. Cather makes it clear that the serious artist must refuse any claim to personal regard and work to fulfill the rewards of creation in solitude. Please Note: This book has been reformatted to be easy to read in true text, not scanned images that can sometimes be difficult to decipher. The Microsoft eBook has a contents page linked to the chapter headings for easy navigation. The Adobe eBook has bookmarks at chapter headings and is printable up to two full copies per year. Both versions are text searchable.
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| 06-12-08 | 5 | 1\1 |
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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 develops her musical and interpretive gifts. Thea is not an entirely lovable character, but I deeply identify with her passion, ambition, and - most of all - her fierce struggle to protect and nurture her talent. Throughout the work, Cather brings up questions about what it means to be an artist and how the process of becoming one affects the artist herself and those around her. As in so may of Cather's works, the land (the vast, untamed American Midwest) is both a metaphor and a character in its own right. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-09-06 05:52:30 EST)
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