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Tenderwire
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Tenderwire Paperback - 2006 - 1st Edition

by Claire Kilroy

A reckless young musician leaves her home in Ireland to play in the New Amsterdam Chamber Orchestra. She collapses after her solo debut, checks herself out of the hospital prematurely, and embarks on a chaotic and dangerous odyssey--the obsessive, paranoid pursuit of a rare violin.


Summary

Brilliant, fast-paced, and highly suspenseful, Tenderwire tells the story of a reckless young musician and her obsession with a very old violin.

Eva Tyne leaves her home in Ireland for New York to play in the New Amsterdam Chamber Orchestra. She collapses after her solo debut, checks herself out of the hospital prematurely, and embarks on a chaotic and dangerous odyssey. She falls in love with a mysterious man and becomes obsessed with a rare violin of dubious provenance, for which she must pay in cash. But consumed by obsession, her pursuit of the violin becomes a nightmare of paranoia: Haunted by the ghost of her father, racked with jealousy, and unsure whom she can trust, Eva is pitched into a desperate psychological conundrum as her desires threaten to destroy her.

Narrated in Eva's unforgettable and unreliable voice, Tenderwire is a guessing game and a whodunit that surprises at every turn.

From the publisher

Brilliant, fast-paced, and highly suspenseful, Tenderwire tells the story of a reckless young musician and her obsession with a very old violin. Eva Tyne leaves her home in Ireland for New York to play in the New Amsterdam Chamber Orchestra. She collapses after her solo debut, checks herself out of the hospital prematurely, and embarks on a chaotic and dangerous odyssey. She falls in love with a mysterious man and becomes obsessed with a rare violin of dubious provenance, for which she must pay in cash. But consumed by obsession, her pursuit of the violin becomes a nightmare of paranoia: Haunted by the ghost of her father, racked with jealousy, and unsure whom she can trust, Eva is pitched into a desperate psychological conundrum as her desires threaten to destroy her. Narrated in Eva's unforgettable and unreliable voice, Tenderwire is a guessing game and a whodunit that surprises at every turn.

From the rear cover

"[Kilroy] writes with an authority of style unexpected in a young novelist." The Evening Herald

Brilliant, fast-paced, and highly suspenseful, Tenderwire is the story of a reckless young musician's obsession with what she suspects may be a hitherto undiscovered violin created by one of the old Italian masters.
Eva Tyne leavesher native Ireland to pursue a career as a classical violinist in New York. After her solo debut, she collapses and is rushed to the hospital. Still vulnerable after the shock, she meets a mysterious man, with whom she enters into an affair filled with passion but tainted by suspicion. Upon encountering a formidably alluring violin of dubious provenance, for which the shifty dealer will accept only cash, Eva realizes she must possess it. Racked with jealously, and unsure whom she can trust, she embarks on a dangerous and chaotic odyssey that rapidly descends into a nightmare of intrigue and paranoia.
Narrated in Eva s unforgettable and unreliable voice, Tenderwireis a guessing game and a whodunit that surprises at every turn.

Claire Kilroy was born in 1973. Her first novel, All Summer, was published to great critical acclaim in the United Kingdom and was the recipient of the 2004 Rooney Prize for Irish Literature. Tenderwire is her American debut. She lives in Dublin.
"

Details

  • Title Tenderwire
  • Author Claire Kilroy
  • Binding Paperback
  • Edition number 1st
  • Edition 1
  • Pages 312
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher Harper Paperbacks, Orlando
  • Date 2006-06-01
  • ISBN 9780156032049 / 015603204X
  • Weight 0.8 lbs (0.36 kg)
  • Dimensions 8 x 5.3 x 0.8 in (20.32 x 13.46 x 2.03 cm)
  • Themes
    • Geographic Orientation: New York
    • Locality: New York, N.Y.
    • Sex & Gender: Feminine
  • Library of Congress subjects Psychological fiction, Suspense fiction
  • Library of Congress Catalog Number 2005027334
  • Dewey Decimal Code FIC

Excerpt

In an Upper East Side neighborhood marked by a preponderance of specialist dry­-­cleaners, after a full nineteen years of preparation with one outcome in mind, I made my concert debut as violin soloist. When we took our places on the waxed golden stage, the members of the month­-­old New Am­sterdam Chamber Orchestra, we could have been in a cornfield in July. It did not matter that it was the first week of January, that ice had paralyzed the city like snakebite. It was summer under the hot lights. We had effected a better season. Outside, there could have been murders in the snow. There could’ve been lung­-­choking fogs. There could have been wild dogs on the loose. We were immune to it. The New York winter couldn’t touch us. It couldn’t get past the cloakroom door, though it lurked in the folds of our coats for our ­return.
 
           The dress rehearsal finished at five o’clock. I had been aware of the pinch in my guts since that morning but had ignored it, there being no time to do anything but ignore it. I went along to the pre-concert dinner and smiled through the thank­-­you speeches delivered to mark the orchestra’s inaugural ­night.
 
           The pain intensified sometime around seven. At first I had dismissed it as nerves—my debut was looming after all. But at five minutes to eight, just before we were due onstage, it stabbed me so hard that I buckled. I slithered down the wall and placed my violin on the dressing room floor. ­“Valentina?”
 
           She looked around and then down. “Oh my god, Eva,” she exclaimed in her lovely precise English, and reached for my ­inhaler.
 
           “V, it’s not ­asthma.”
 
           “I’ll get ­Zach.”
 
           “No, lock the ­door.”
 
           She locked the door and hunkered down beside me. “Oh Jesus, what’s wrong? Are you ­okay?”

            Someone knocked politely. “Eva?” It was ­Zach.
 
           “Don’t answer,” I warned her. Another knife of pain and I clenched my teeth, the halogen lights suddenly blindingly sharp. Zach knocked again, loudly this time, his tension seeping under the door and infecting the room. I grabbed Valentina’s wrist. “Something’s ­happening.”
 
           “Can you stand ­up?”
 
           I shook my ­head.
 
           “Eva? You in there?” Zach cursed when the handle wouldn’t yield to him. “Why is this door locked?” His voice was now ­addressed to someone behind him. “Where’s Valentina? Jesus Christ, it’s almost time.” He took off down the ­corridor.
 
           “Valentina, I can’t go out ­there.”
 
           She blanched. “Show me where it ­hurts.”
 
           I showed her where the pain was. “I think my appendix is about to burst or ­something.”
 
           “That’s not your ­appendix.”
 
           Thump thump thump on the door. Zach was back. “Open the fucking door, Eva, it’s practically ­eight.”
 
           The pain eased. I released Valentina’s wrist and told her to let him in. She rearranged my skirts for modesty and unlocked the ­door.
ly: 'Times New Roman'" 
           “I can’t go onstage,” I said when Zach blustered in, unwelcome as a ­wasp.
 
           “What? Why ­not?”
 
           “I’m ­sick.”
 
           “You’re not sick. It’s stage fright. Get ­up.”
 
           “She is sick,” Valentina ­insisted.
 
           Konrad stuck his head into the room. “Eight o’clock,” he reminded us, then spotted me in a heap on the floor. ­“Superb.”
 
           Zach shut the door on him and turned the key in the lock. “I’m not canceling the concert, so I don’t care if you can’t play, Eva, you fucking have to.”
 
           Alarm was rising in the corridor like the water level in a sinking ship. I waited for another wave of pain, but none came. Strange. As if it had been listening. As if it cared about me and said, Okay, I can wait, but not for too long, mind. I lifted my face. “It seems to have stopped,” I said ­cautiously.
 
           Zach helped me to my feet before I could change my mind. “Valentina, go organize the others.” She grabbed her violin and left. The ache was still there, but now the fear was more immediate. Fear conquered pain. Applause down the corridor as the others filed onstage. Zach put his hands on my shoulders and chanted words of encouragement. The usual stuff about my gift, his faith in me. He armed me with my violin and ­bow.

           Panic surged as I stood in the darkness behind the stage door—a few seconds of my heart pumping so hard and so fast that I thought I might collapse. I watched the group onstage through the glass panel. Valentina sounded the clarion call, concert pitch A. The note swelled as each instrument joined it, then it died away. The audience coughed and settled. Zach pointed his baton at ­me.
 
           “Don’t leave me standing out there like a fuck, ­Eva.”
 
           “I ­won’t.”
 
           “I mean it. Don’t do that to ­me.”
 
           “I won’t.” He didn’t look reassured. “I won’t,” I said ­again.
 
           The door guy pulled the door back and Zach strode out. He gestured at the orchestra it had taken him three years of begging letters to found, and this newborn orchestra of his rose to its feet for a maiden bow. There was something marvelous about ­it.
 
           Zach stepped onto the podium, took his bow, then turned my ­way.
 
           “Go for it,” the door guy ­said.
 
 
 
The first drink after a performance goes straight to your head. I raised my glass to my lips, but my glass was empty. I didn’t recall emptying it; not a problem. I held it out and Zach refilled it. We toasted ourselves. Though—apart from my dear friend Valentina—I barely knew the names of the members of this new orchestra, I loved them all. This was no overstatement. I felt a very real love for each and every one of them right then, and I believed that they loved me back. It was not a love characterized by its longevity—we’d be sick of one another again in an hour or so—but it was love ­nonetheless.
 
           I knew, somewhere in the back of my head, that I was wheezing, but it didn’t matter. Our reception mattered. The board of directors and their words of appreciation mattered. The crystal chandelier and ornate plasterwork mattered. It was important to make note of them and shore them up for later. During the long hours of solitary practice ahead, such memories would sustain me. We toasted ourselves once ­more.
 
           I felt warm. In fact, I was a little hot, and then I was as quickly cold. I looked up at the domed glass ceiling and saw that it had begun snowing again. The snow collected at the apex and slid down the curved glass in segments. I ­shivered.
 
           “Ms. ­Tyne?”
 
           “Yes?” I turned around, smiling. It was the theater operations manager. The sight of him was disheartening; he had the manner of a funeral director. Although he’d known me on and off for several years now in various incarnations, all of them more ­humble than that of soloist, he always used a title when addressing me, and he always used it mournfully, as if it grieved him. Ms. Tyne. It was an apology, a signal that something unpleasant was about to occur. How quickly the anticlimax had set ­in.
 
           The room flickered. I glanced up at the chandelier in time to see a bulb fizzle and expire. The jaundiced light drained the color out of things. The floor lurched and began to descend, as if we were in a huge elevator. I steadied myself against a ­chair.
 
           “Ms. Tyne?” the manager repeated, this time touching my arm. “Are you sure you’re feeling all right?” I shook my head. No, I wasn’t at all sure. The pain in my gut was ­back.
 
           “Could you please take this?” I handed him my glass. “I’ll be fine in a moment. I just need some ­air.”
 
           I pushed through the room, excusing myself and apologizing. “Ms. Tyne, Ms. Tyne,” the guests muttered in my wake, and some of them were saying “Eva Tyne,” which was worse. I plunged through the double doors and hurried downstairs to the restroom, shutting myself into a cubicle. Over and over I vomited into the toilet, getting it on my hands, my hair, my ­dress.
 
           The door to the restroom opened. Two women came in, no, three, discussing the performance. I retched again and the voices fell silent. “Please,” I implored the partition, “whoever is out there, can you find me Valentina, the ­concertmaster?”
 
           “Someone’s had a bit too much to drink,” commented one of the ­voices.
 
           “I’m not drunk. Go back upstairs and get Valentina. Blond hair, very pretty.” Not a sound out of them. “Hurry,” I begged, and threw up again. The last of the champagne. Fizzy ­vomit.
 
           There was a stupefied silence, then the doors clattered shut. I sat back against the cubicle wall in unbelievable pain. Blood. I moaned at the ceiling. I couldn’t look at the blood, couldn’t climb off the ground to escape it. The restroom doors opened ­again.
 
           “Eva?” ­Valentina.
 
           “Get me an ­ambulance.”
 
           There was another blast of pain, and as I cried she ran out of the place. God bless my fleet handmaiden, my Monégasque angel—she did exactly as asked. Within minutes we were out on the side lane with the rats. The icy air against my bare skin was a shock, like being hurled overboard. I was bundled into the back of the ambulance that would take me the few blocks to the ­hospital.
 
           The medics didn’t shout at each other as I’d imagined they might. They were efficient, kind. Valentina stood by, the blue light of the ambulance flashing across her stricken features. She looked Edwardian in her black satin, she looked spectral. I didn’t want to let go of her hand. “Tell them I had a headache,” I said, and she nodded vigorously. Tears were streaming down her cheeks too. The worst of it was almost over, though I didn’t know it ­then.
 
           The stretcher was locked into place and we raced off. I was still wearing my red silk evening dress. I kept my eyes on the dress. It was important to concentrate on it, on how well it suited me, how pretty I felt in it. The stains on the silk, had the people upstairs glimpsed them, could easily have passed for splashes of ­champagne.
 
 
Copyright © 2006 by Claire Kilroy
 
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or
transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical,
including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and
retrieval system, without permission in writing from the ­publisher.
 
Requests for permission to make copies of any part of the work
should be submitted online at www.harcourt.com/contact or mailed
to the following address: Permissions Department, Harcourt, Inc.,
6277 Sea Harbor Drive, Orlando, Florida 32887­-­6777.

Media reviews

INTERNATIONAL PRAISE FOR ALL SUMMER
"A thriller, a confession and a love story framed by a meditation on the arts."-THE TIMES (London)

"All Summer is a strangely haunting and compelling novel that heralds an exciting new talent in Irish writing."
-DERMOT BOLGER, THE SUNDAY TRIBUNE (Dublin)

Citations

  • Kirkus Best Books, 05/01/2006, Page 7
  • Kirkus Reviews, 04/01/2006, Page 315
  • Library Journal, 04/15/2006, Page 67
  • Publishers Weekly, 04/03/2006, Page 40
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