The Lost Pianos of Siberia
Sophy Roberts
The Lost Pianos of Siberia
Sophy Roberts
A critically-acclaimed Sunday Times and Spectator book of 2020, and a major new literary voice.
Siberia’s history is traditionally one of exiles, bitter cold and suffering. Yet there is another tale to tell. Dotted throughout this remote landscape are pianos created during the boom years of the nineteenth century. They tell the story of how, ever since entering Russian culture under the influence of Catherine the Great, piano music has run through the country like blood. How these pianos travelled into this snow-bound wilderness in the first place is remarkable. That they might still be capable of making music in such a hostile landscape is nothing less than a miracle.
The Lost Pianos of Siberia is an absorbing story about a piano hunt – a quixotic journey through two centuries of Russian history and eight time zones stretching across an eleventh of the world’s land surface. It reveals not only an unexpected musical legacy, but profound humanity in the last place on earth you might expect to find it.
Review
Marie Matteson
‘Instead of tigers, I would track pianos,’ Sophy Roberts declares while sharing a meal with a Siberian tiger researcher in the Far East of Russia. This was the moment when Roberts decided she would search for one of the lost pianos of Siberia. She had previously been asked by a friend if she might be interested in tracking down a piano that had aged along with Siberia; a piano that could capture the warmth and the longing of Bach and Chopin, and so prove a fitting companion for a mutual friend and virtuoso pianist in the steppes of Mongolia.
This emblematic and also practical search for pianos in the vastness of Siberia propels a fascinating trip through more than three centuries of Russian and Siberian history. In the style of the best travel writing, Roberts moves through a landscape both present and remembered, interweaving grand narratives of Russian and European colonial history with grounding anecdotes and characters from her immediate experiences.
With each encounter Roberts is pulled through the centuries of Russian history, from Catherine the Great promoting an uptake in European music to the establishment of music schools by noble exiles in the nineteenth century. It was the Soviet-era promotion of music education that brought a music school to every town and city, and this fact convinces Roberts that there must be many pianos in Siberia to be found.
As we read, we travel as Roberts does – with writers, exiles and adventurers who came before, from Chekhov (on a journey to a tsarist penal colony to write about the brutality of exile), to two women from California and their pet dog who came to join a communist collective in the 1920s.
Evocatively and elegantly weaving together the companion stories of harsh exile and delicate music, The Lost Pianos of Siberia is as unexpected and satisfying as its title.
Marie Matteson is a book buyer at Readings Carlton.
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