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Loading... The Maestro (1995)by Tim Wynne-Jones
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. because I've liked other offbeat stories by the author Running away from his abusive father and drug addict mother, 14 year old Burl finds a remote cabin inhabited by an eccentric genius. In one day, Nathaniel Orlando Gow changes Burl’s life forever. In the fall,the master orchestra conductor dies and leaves behind an unpublished masterpiece that Burl keeps for a CBC producer. However, all is lost in a fire caused by his father that destroys the cabin. A powerful story of a young boy who can’t live at home with his parents and his new friend “the maestro” doesn’t want him either. He matures quickly when making the decision to run away and then stay in the cabin when Gow leaves. Burl runs away from his abusive father into the woods of Northern Ontario where he has a startling encounter with an urban composer craving isolation. The Maestro gives Burl a glimpse of a different life than living with a broken and abusive family, or scrabbling to survive in the wilderness. This was part family abuse story, part wilderness adventure, and part grifter tale. And part fantasy - some suspension of disbelief is required to accept everything that 14-year-old Burl does, he acts like a much older person. But the story is a page turner. I found the ending both inevitable and a bit disappointing, and very neatly wrapped up, but the journey to get there was good. Someone mentioned to me that the Maestro is based on Glenn Gould, which may added amusement for those familiar with the eccentric pianist. I'd give this to readers looking for runaway stories, or adventure stories, tales of kids surviving on their own. no reviews | add a review
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Fleeing from his brutal father, fourteen-year-old Burl arrives at the remote cabin of an eccentric genius who in just one day changes the young man's life forever. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813Literature American literature in English American fiction in EnglishLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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