Tuesday, August 6, 2019

Review: Night Music

Night Music Night Music by Jenn Marie Thorne
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Ruby has always been Ruby Chertok, daughter of renowned composer Martin Chertok and heir to the family legacy. After Ruby's horrendous audition at prestigious Amberley where her father is on faculty, it is clear that music does not love her as much as she loves it. Now Ruby is just Ruby, and she is searching for a way out of classical music and out of the orbit of her impressive family.

Oscar Bell is a classical music genius, and while he might say his favorite composer is himself, he will make you somehow love him more for it. Ruby's father sees a lot of talent and potential in Oscar's classical music composure, and for the summer, he is living with the Chertok family. However, being an African American 17-year-old in the Amberley programme, he will not risk his chances to study under the great Martin Chertok- not even for a crush.

"The he turned and saw me, and I could swear, his whole body ignited, a machine revving to life. Genius or no, the guy had excellent manners"

"I like you, Ruby. More than I probably should."

It seems as if Ruby and Oscar fell for each other at the same moment and their playful banter brings them closer together. As Oscar becomes more comfortable at Amberley's programme and he is officially dating Ruby, his presence as a composer at Amberley is being turned against him since he is a black guy. There are scandals at Amberley that push Oscar to his limit. This is a great coming of age novel in which relationships blossom between many of the characters.

"I like him, he's everything I'm not and I should resent the very fact of him, but I like him so much. He's brilliant and hot and vivid and funny and.."

I thoroughly enjoyed this novel and the relationships that grew stronger between Oscar and Ruby, Ruby with her father and her friend Jules. This book is beautiful, heartfelt, emotional, raw, and everything a book should be. Night Music is a melody I never want to leave my head!

"I could recognize Oscar in every lilt, every strain, every unresolved chord... his humor, his heart, his pain, the way he split himself, the way he tried and blustered and suffered and hid it behind a smile- his courage. I heard all of him because I knew him but there was even more there than I'd ever imagined"



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