Gustav Mahler wasn't cut out for New York...he had bigger things to do. "Horowitz has created two of classical music's most convincing fictional portraits ... [he has] brought us closer to Mahler and his wife Alma than any other author I have read."--Clive Paget, Musical America "Horowitz is a master of what I would call 'passionate scholarship.' He has a stake in what he writes. There is a lot of very sensitive skin in his game. As a literary writer he is at heart the free-spirited scholar he has been for decades; his prose frames in precise words the psychological ambiguities of personalities no less than the nuances of musical compositions or performances. His deep historical knowledge blends with his narrative imagination to bring to life the sounds, the smells, the physical textures, the very air his characters breathed: Gustav and Alma Mahler are, at the same time, accurate historical portraits and haunting literary presences."--Antonio Muñoz Molina, winner of the Jerusalem Prize "Despite his emotions having so often been on show, there has always been something enigmatic and unknowable about Gustav Mahler. But where biographers and other musicologists have struggled, Joseph Horowitz succeeds brilliantly in revealing the inner Mahler in this powerful and moving novel. It is a triumph of historical imagination."--Richard Aldous, author of Tunes of Glory: The Life of Malcolm Sargent "If we want to get closer to the 'truth' of Mahler and his music, if we hope to improve our understanding of the person and his creations, we need to acknowledge the role our imagination must play in the learning process. In the case of Mahler, the essential facts have long been known. What we need now are fresh attempts to conceive what further truths they might contain. Joseph Horowitz's brilliant novel reveals much to us about who Mahler was, what he accomplished, and how he related to his world. Readers will be as eager to study it as they would any biography, and they can expect to learn as much."--Charles Youmans, author of Mahler and Strauss: In Dialogue "Joe Horowitz's The Marriage portrays Mahler with more power and poignancy than anyone else ever has. Set in a spider web of New York City wealth, power, and intrigue, the writing is so profoundly personal, so searingly intimate, that it is sometimes painful to read - to get that close to Mahler and his wife. I found myself unable to resist reading passages several times. The story of Gustav Mahler's life -- and of h