The Applause of the Gods, a Novel

by Warren R B Dixon


Formats

Softcover
$23.99
Hardcover
$34.99
E-Book
$3.99
Softcover
$23.99

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 6/30/2016

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 660
ISBN : 9781524512323
Format : Hardcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 660
ISBN : 9781524512330
Format : E-Book
Dimensions : N/A
Page Count : 660
ISBN : 9781524512347

About the Book

This story of Faustian bargains happened in Paris in the 1950s. Using any means necessary to get to the top with her talent, Kathleen Ingersoll reached the far edge of possibility as a classical pianist. With the higher music establishment in the background, her story is neither about music nor about Paris. It is about a woman and the cost of extreme ambition, about love and other dangers, and about time and the river. Events on streets and in neighborhoods that were never in Paris are in this book the same way that Poe’s murders happened in the Rue Morgue. Persons who existed in the past—for example, Josephine Baker—are images in a distorted mirror. The world in this book and the one we call real happen inches apart. Whether Kathleen Ingersoll’s bargains with an imaginary or true devil could actually have happened somewhere, sometime, the author leaves to his many coauthors, the readers. They necessarily will see the story as different from what the author saw in telling it.


About the Author

The author, Warren R. B. Dixon, was born in Detroit on Warren Avenue in 1926. That street and his mother’s admiration for the then recently deceased infamous President Warren G. Harding gave Dixon his first name. The author grew up in Kentucky and Ohio. He served in the Pacific as a submariner in WWII. Following a ragtag interval of business struggles, student adventures, and the usual youthful indiscretions, Dixon had a forty-year run as economics professor and administrator in academia. In retirement, this is his sixth novel. When not wandering, he lives in the Champlain Valley, well inland from Plattsburgh. When not writing, he spends time with Schubert’s lieder or Leila Josefowicz’s violin or just staring into space, wishing he could write like Hilary Mantel.