Author:Stephen Sondheim
As he did in the acclaimed Finishing the Hat, Sondheim richly annotates his lyrics with personal and theatre history, discussions of his collaborations, and exacting, charming dissections of his work - both the successes and the failures. Picking up where he left off in Finishing the Hat, he gives us all the lyrics, along with cutouts and early drafts, to the Pulitzer Prize-winning Sunday in the Park with George, as well as Into the Woods, Assassins, and Passion. Here too is an in-depth look at Wise Guys, subsequently transformed into Bounce, and eventually into Road Show. And we are treated to chapters on his work for television and film and his "orphan songs," culled from parodies and special occasions over the years.
Filled with behind-the-scenes photographs and illustrations from original manuscripts, and with the same elegant design as the earlier book, Look, I Made A Hat will be devoured by Sondheim's passionate fans today and for years to come.
A handsome, cool, enigmatic Gen X’er who never seems to age, James King is the perfect man to write about Keanu Reeves.
James has been my movie guru for years and now he's my spiritual guru too! From now on I'm going to ask myself: 'What would Keanu do?'
—— Jo WhileyHilarious!
—— HELLO! MagazineWith light-hearted as well as serious advice, expect chapters that cover each Keanu iteration, from The Guru to The Lover and The Pioneer.
—— The Scotsman MagazineWhat shines through in this book is Roberts' genuine, humane affection for and fascination with the people she meets in Siberia.
—— Literary ReviewA stunning example of modern historical travel writing
—— IndependentA richly observed cultural history... thrilling.
—— New StatesmanFascinating account of Siberia’s horrific legacy told with great verve… Roberts is a wonderfully lyrical writer.
—— The ObserverBeautifully written... A unique short history of Russia from Catherine the Great to Putin... A sense of the extraordinary marks every page.
—— History TodayCaptures Siberia's wildness, but favours its enchantments.
—— Times Literary SupplementCourage, patience, erudition and a sympathetic imagination… A travel book of rare quality.
—— Dervla MurphyRoberts achievement is to vividly bring us into a hidden landscape that in an over-travelled world retains its mystique. Through her painterly depiction of the people she encounters, she infuses the epic with the intimate and reveals how sometimes looking is more important than finding
—— Business Post MagazineUtterly absorbing - a wonderful addition to the story of resilience, tragedy and triumph that are the hallmarks of Siberia. Roberts displays an empathy and understanding worthy of this deeply haunted, strangely fascinating land.
—— Benedict AllenRoberts' writing is beguiling.
—— The iA modern-day Freya Stark.
—— TatlerThe Lost Pianos of Siberia is one of those magical books that captures the imagination and draws you into the beauty and majesty of Siberia. Idiosyncratic in style – part travelogue, part history, part detective trail – it is full of wonderful stories about human endurance through adversity and the transformative power of music in the most remote and forgotten outposts of this vast territory. A book to savour and remember.
—— Helen Rappaport, author of THE LAST DAYS OF THE ROMANOVSUtterly fascinating and revealing to anyone who only knows Siberia through its Great Myth as a forgotten, frozen Nowhere.
—— Christopher SomervilleA thrilling adventure to the ends of the earth, where sunlight glitters in the snowdrifts and the strains of the exile's song floats through the air. Pack your suitcases for Siberia - Sophy Roberts' gorgeous prose will summon you there like a smell.
—— Cal Flyn, author of THICKER THAN WATERWhat worlds this book traverses! From gilded recital halls to the haunts of Siberian tigers; from remote penal colonies to volcanic islands in the Bering Sea: I felt as if I had travelled through places I had only dreamed of, following these magical instruments through landscapes and histories so full of tragedy and hope.
—— Daniel Mason, author of THE PIANO TUNERAbsolutely intoxicating. Such vivid detail, rich atmosphere, heartbreak, and elegance. Sophy Roberts melds research and personal experience to trace the paths of political prisoners, convicts, and conscripts determined to find beauty in exile, and track down the regal pianos now scattered in villages, museums, and storehouses across the largest country on earth. Some cherished and some neglected, these pianos tell of the musical colonization of a continent, and their stories sing.
—— Jonathan C. Slaght, author of OWLS OF THE EASTERN ICERomance and tragedy, gulags and tower blocks, princes and oligarchs and of course tigers and pianos, Roberts captures all the wonder and heartbreak of an entire Empire in one feast of a book.
—— Ben Rawlence, author of CITY OF THORNS and RADIO CONGONot-to-be-missed travel.
—— The TabletBeautifully constructed, clear-eyed and generous-spirited.
—— Will Atkins, author of THE MOOR and THE IMMEASURABLE WORLDStories endure in this compelling debut.
—— WanderlustA noble quest to understand the dazzling respect for music embedded in Russian culture.
—— Country LifeAn intoxicating journey into the wilds of Siberia.
—— Stella magazine