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The Bass Saxophone

Published
Dec 1985
Main Genre
General Fiction General Fiction
Rating
Pages
216

About This Book

The two haunting, poetic novellas that comprise The Bass Saxophone brilliantly evoke the comedy and sadness of life under the Nazi and Soviet dictatorships. They are prefaced by a remarkable memoir of Skvorecky's jazz-obsessed youth. Jazz is a symbol of freedom in both these novellas.

In Emoke, which is set in the shadow of the Communist regime, jazz becomes the means by which a jaded young man plots the seduction of a mysterious girl enmeshed in superstition and the occult. Spurned, but fascinated, he is drawn into her tortured existence until catapulted into the final bitter comedy.

In The Bass Saxophone a young Czechoslovakian student living under the rule of the Nazis is lured by his love of jazz - the "forbidden music" - into secretly and dangerously playing in a German band, with bizarre and unexpected results.

Written with the lyrical intensity of a great jazz performance, these two extraordinary novellas are among Skvorecky's finest works.

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Paperback

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Paperback
First Edition Dec 1985 Washington Square Press ISBN 0671556819
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Trade Paperback
Aug 1994 Ecco Press ISBN 0880013702
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eBook

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eBook
May 2013 Knopf ISBN B00C8S9UVC
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eBook
May 2013 Knopf ISBN 0307832120
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