'The Cello Suites' author Eric Siblin
Photo: Marcie Richstone
Siblin strikes a chord with Governor-General Award nomination
Next Tuesday, Nov. 17, the 2009 Governor General’s Literary Awards will be announced — and this year a Westmount author is in the running for one of the prestigious prizes. Eric Siblin has been nominated for his non-fiction book The Cello Suites. The best-selling book is also a Writer’s Trust Non-Fiction Prize finalist, and has been nominated for two Quebec Writer’s Federation Literary Awards. “I won’t say it’s immaterial whether I win or lose, but it certainly feels terrific having landed these nominations,” said Siblin. “In truth, while I was writing the book, I think a lot of my friends and colleagues thought it was very idiosyncratic and uncommercial. So I’ve been pleasantly surprised to see how the book has done.” Moving elegantly between three narrative strands, the book tells the life story of Johann Sebastian Bach, the story of 20th-century cellist Pablo Casals and his fascination with Bach’s cello suites, and the growth of Siblin’s own interest in Bach’s music. The structure is derived from the suites themselves, tying together music, politics, war, and love. “My goal from the beginning, in terms of writing the book, was can I extract a story from a piece of music?" Siblin reflected. "The book tries to do a lot of things, but one of the hidden agendas of the book is to turn people on to classical music the way that I experienced it. Because before I started on this project I was really a classical neophyte.” Siblin noted that response from cellists has been “overwhelmingly positive,” with some musicians giving him “the supreme compliment” of saying his book influenced the way they play the music. The Cello Suites is only Siblin’s first book. “I’m writing fiction now,” he said of his future plans. “That feels every bit as daunting as writing about a piece of music.”
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