The Inextinguishable Symphony
A True Story of Music and Love in Nazi Germany
Description
About this Author
MARTIN GOLDSMITH is director of classical music programming at XM Satellite Radio in Washington, D.C. From 1989 to 1999, he was the host of National Public Radio's Performance Today. Prior to that he served for a dozen years at WETA-fm, the NPR affiliate in Washington, D.C., as producer, announcer, and music director. He lives in Maryland with his wife, Amy Roach.
Reviews
Praise for The Inextinguishable Symphony:
"The Holocaust has hovered on the periphery of the American imagination for so many decades now, it's hard to believe a book could come along at this point to burn a whole new perspective into our consciousness. But that's just what Martin Goldsmith has done with this astonishing work. . . . Goldsmith [writes] with modesty, restraint, and skill . . . masterly."
--San Francisco Chronicle
"A fascinating insight into a virtually unknown chapter of Nazi rule in Germany, made all the more engaging through a son's discovery of his own remarkable parents."
--Ted Koppel, ABC News
"An immensely moving and powerful description of those evil times. I couldn't put the book down."
--James Galway, Grammy Award-winning Flutist
"Martin Goldsmith has written a moving and personal account of a search for identity. His is a story that will touch all readers with its integrity. This is not about exorcising ghosts, but rather awakening passions that no one ever knew existed. This is a journey everyone should take."
--Leonard Slatkin, Music Director National Symphony Orchestra
"For years I've been familiar with Martin Goldsmith's musical expertise. This book explains the source of his knowledge and his passion for the subject. In tracking the extraordinary story of his parents and the Jewish Kulturbund, Martin unfolds a little-known piece of holocaust history, and finds depths in his own heart that warm the hearts of readers."
--Susan Stamberg, Special Correspondent National Public Radio
"[A] strong and painful book, well-written, well-researched, moving, and very instructive."
--Ned Rorem, Pulitzer Prize-Winning Composer
"As much a tribute to the power of music as it is a Holocaust memoir, this book tells the deeply affecting story of a love that survived the terrors of WWII."
--Publishers Weekly
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