cover image Henry Purcell

Henry Purcell

Maureen Duffy. Trafalgar Square Publishing, $17.95 (0pp) ISBN 978-1-85702-368-8

Novelist Duffy (That's How It Was) brings a formidable amount of scholarship, as well as a very welcome inclination to dramatize wherever possible, to this life of England's most famous pre-19th-century composer. But the fact is that an extraordinarily limited amount is known about Purcell, other than that he was vastly celebrated in his lifetime, steered adroitly clear of the partisan royalist and religious struggles of his era (the late 17th century) and died in his 30s, as pathetically early as Mozart; reputedly he was locked out of the house by his wife on returning late from an evening of drinking, and succumbed to what was probably a virulent form of influenza. Even this colorful tale cannot be confirmed, but like much of what appears in Duffy's book, has to be pieced together from the personal diaries, publications and scanty public records of the time. There is therefore vast supposition at work here; and though Duffy manages it as gracefully as possible, a great deal of extraneous detail has to be sifted to get at the bones of Purcell's short life. The music, fortunately, can still be heard, and Duffy's evocations of his greatest works are sufficient to send any music lover back to his immortal legacy. (June)