Product Details
The Cellist of Sarajevo

The Cellist of Sarajevo
By Steven Galloway

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Product Description

This is the top 10 bestseller, now in paperback. Snipers in the hills overlook the shattered streets of Sarajevo. Knowing that the next bullet could strike at any moment, the ordinary men and women below strive to go about their daily lives as best they can. Kenan faces the agonizing dilemma of crossing the city to get water for his family. Dragan, gripped by fear, does not know who among his friends he can trust. And Arrow, a young woman counter-sniper must push herself to the limits - of body and soul, fear and humanity.Told with immediacy, grace and harrowing emotional accuracy, "The Cellist of Sarajevo" shows how, when the everyday act of crossing the street can risk lives, the human spirit is revealed in all its fortitude - and frailty.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #504 in Books
  • Published on: 2009-01-01
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 288 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
"'Though the setting is the siege of Sarajevo in the 1990s, this gripping novel transcends time and place. It is a universal story, and a testimony to the struggle to find meaning, grace, and humanity, even amid the most unimaginable horrors.' Khaled Hosseini, author of The Kite Runner * 'A grand and powerful novel about how people retain or reclaim their humanity when they are under extreme duress...While reading The Cellist of Sarajevo you are imaginatively there, in Sarajevo, as the mortar shells are falling and snipers are seeking to kill you as you cross a street. Your mind's eye sees, your moral sense is outraged: your full humanity is being exercised.' Yann Martel * 'Galloway's style is sparse, pared down; his prose has the deceptive simplicity of a short story. The work of an expert, The Cellist of Sarajevo is a controlled and subtle piece of craftsmanship.' - Observer * 'Startlingly good... With prose as unsentimental and deadly as gunfire, Galloway superbly captures the tense existence of a city under siege where daily tasks become a gamble between life and death, yet where a single note of music can exert a power equal to any bomb or bullet.' - Metro"

Khaled Hosseini, author of The Kite Runner and A Thousand Splendid Suns
`Though the setting is the siege of Sarajevo in the 1990s, this gripping novel transcends time and place. It is a universal story, and a testimony to the struggle to find meaning, grace, and humanity, even amid the most unimaginable horrors.'

Z. Z. Packer
`I cannot imagine a lovelier, more beautifully wrought book about the depravity of war as The Cellist of Sarajevo. Each chapter is a brief glimpse at yet another aspect of the mind, the heart, the soul - altogether Galloway gives us fine, deep notes of human music which will remain long after the final page.'


Customer Reviews

A book that makes you think5
The cello, with its wonderfully rich and mellow tones, has to be one of my favourite instruments, so I was immediately drawn to this book. For a long time, though, I resisted reading it, fearing that war-torn Sarajevo would be a harrowing and morbid subject. Instead the book provided a riveting insight into the daily struggles of ordinary people caught up in a situation over which they have no control.

I hadn't realised until I read the author's Afterword that the idea for the story, itself entirely fictional, came from a true-life situation. A cellist sits at the same spot in a bombed street at the same time every day for 22 days and plays Albinoni's haunting Adagio in honour of the 22 people killed there by mortar shells while waiting to buy bread. It's a dangerous memorial - the cellist is, literally, a sitting target for snipers.

The book isn't about the cellist himself, though. It's about the inspiration and hope his music conveys to people caught up in a daily struggle to live and stay alive, as well as the tragic waste that inevitably comes with war. In many ways, this is less a novel, more a snapshot of the lives of three individuals during those 22 days. As they watch their beloved city crumble around them, services we take for granted like electricity and running water become so unreliable as to exist only in the memory, and obtaining food and fresh water becomes a matter of life and death.

Throughout the book the novelist concentrates on Kenan's efforts to carry sufficient water to last a week, both for his family and for an irascible old woman who lives downstairs and to whom he feels an obligation even though he doesn't like her. In the case of Dragan, an older man who managed to get his wife and son to Italy before the siege began, the author details his efforts to reach the bakery where he has worked for forty years. He counts himself lucky to have a job in a city where so many are unemployed, and although not paid in cash, which is virtually worthless, he receives his wages in the form of bread to take home. Lastly there is Arrow, an outstanding counter-sniper tasked with keeping the cellist alive, and in many ways her story is the most compelling.

A little of the past lives of the characters is revealed through occasional flashbacks, as they mourn the lives they used to live, when the city was `normal' and before the siege became the new normality.

For some, the book may seem fragmented as it switches from one character to the next but I didn't find it so. The book is well written, and the use of the present tense conveys a sense of immediacy, of being there with the characters, a part of their stories. To say I enjoyed reading it sounds inappropriate for such a subject, but I couldn't think of another verb that was any better. I could certainly have gone on reading about these people for much longer, which must be the ultimate test of a good read.

The Cellist of Sarajevo3
This represented an intriguing read which is full of useful anecdotes and reminders of what it was like to be faced with sniper fire during the four year siege of this famous and celebrated city of culture, Sarajevo. The focal point of the plot is taken from the angle of three central characters which had to endure the trauma of civil war and the loss of any normality and humanity in their beloved city. The key characters are dragan, Kennan and arrow. Arrow (the sniper code-name and female) is chosen to protect the cellist from sniper fire at all costs and act therefore as a counter-sniper, thus protecting her own sense of culture and humanity in the midst of chaos. However, Kennan and dragan are different. Through their mundane experiences, such as collecting water at the other end of the city, a parallel sub-plot emerges where Galloway can comment on the trauma, uncertainty, tragedy and slaughter people had to endure in order to complete basic tasks. Both Kennan and Dragan question the meaning of their existence and the fragility of their lives as the loss of friends, via the snipers, becomes ritualised and normalised. You truly experience how hard it was for people in Yugoslavia to maintain any sense of shock when ritualised murder of innocents was so common in the 1990s. The plot thickens at the end when Galloway hangs this sense of wonder and curiosity in the plot around the cellist and arrow. The question of whether the cellist will survive from the onslaught of the snipers and be protected by arrow becomes the integral theme. An interesting read. However, a key criticism of the novel was the fact that characters are not fully developed and the ending is rather flat when you consider the build up of tension prior to the finale.

beautiful yet terrible4
This is a powerful book which really creates empathy for the people living day to day in a war-torn environment. I think we tend to focus more on the wider aspects of such catastrophe but this novel singled out three characters and depicted beautifully, sensitively and tragically how their daily lives were affected by the fear, the lack of resources; things we all take for granted. Highly recommended.