Jacket for 'The Song of Names'

Publishers

UK - Headline
China - Shanghai Translation
Poland - Swiat Ksiazki

The Song of Names

By Norman Lebrecht

 

Two boys are growing up in wartime London. Martin is an only child, imprisoned in swottish loneliness. Then Dovidl enters his home, a refugee violinist from Warsaw. ‘I am genius,’ says Dovidl. ‘You have information. Together we make good team.’

His arrival brings merriment and love, mischief and menace. Blood-brothers, they roam the ruined city, finding tragedy and triumph, sex and crime. It is the time of their lives, their finest hour.

Then Dovidl disappears, on the afternoon of his international debut. Martin is broken-hearted, his father near-bankrupted, the police dumbfounded. Where has he gone? How can a genius escape his date with destiny? How could he betray a brother?

Martin is condemned to forty years of humdrum half-life until, one wintry night, an unexpected musical clue sets him on the trail to an astonishing act of self-discovery, and renewal.

Soon to be a major feature film directed by François Girard, starring Tim Roth, Clive Owen and Catherine McCormick, The Song of Names won a Whitbread First Novel Award in 2003.

This is an interesting tale, Lebrecht recreates the atmosphere of war-time London through a child’s eyes with vigour.
Scotsman

This complex and often tragic story reads entertainingly… an unusually impressive first novel.
Spectator