The first book in nationally renowned librarian
Nancy Pearl’s new Book Lust Rediscoveries series, this
lost literary classic is available for the first time in
decades. As funny and entertaining as it is captivating
and heartrending, A Gay and Melancholy Sound is a
shattering depiction of modern disconnection and the
tragic consequences of a life bereft of love. Joshua
Bland has lived the kind of life many would define as
extraordinary. Born in a small Iowa town to a
controlling, delusional mother who had always wanted a
daughter rather than a son, her anger at him colors his
life. His father, a compassionate drinker incapable of
dealing with Joshua’s mother, walks out on his wife and
son, leaving a vacuum in the family that is damagingly
filled by his tutor-cum-stepfather Petrarch Pavan, scion
of a wealthy New York family who has secrets of his own.
Playing on Joshua’s brilliance, Petrarch trains him to
win a nationwide knowledge competition, but Joshua’s
disappointing results in the finals are met with anger
and disbelief by both his mother and stepfather. If
Petrarch was unsuccessful in teaching Joshua the
information he needed to win the contest, he had more
success in instilling Joshua with the cynicism,
self-doubt, and self-hatred that fill his own soul.
Enlisting in the army during World War II, he serves
first as an infantryman, where his irreverent letters
home turn him into a best- selling author. Then, as a
paratrooper, he meets the physical challenges he thought
were beyond his reach and helps free the concentration
camps before being wounded as the Allied forces free
Buchenwald. Back home after the war, he becomes a wildly
successful producer—and all of this by the age of
thirty-seven. But when his production company flounders
amid critical and financial woes, the reality of who he
is becomes perfectly, depressingly clear: he has had a
lifetime of extraordinary experiences—and no emotional
connection to any of it.
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