For all the ambiguity surrounding the identity/gender/etc.
of K.J. Parker, there is at least one thing for certain: they know how to write
stories. 2011’s A Small Price for Birdsong is a solid novella that presents a surface
rendering of a composer dealing with success and morality in all too human
fashion. Winner of Parker’s first genre award
(the World Fantasy), the story comes well recommended.
A
Small Price for Birdsong is the story of
an unnamed music professor, and opens in the cell of his most brilliant
student, Aimeric
Subtilius of Bohec, as the man awaits death by hanging. The professor attempting to coax out of
Subtilius the theme to the last movement of his unfinished symphony before he
is sent to the gallows. But the
condemned man refuses to give it up, saying death is greater place for his
music to reside than with the populace that would see him put to death. Seeking the final movement only for the
passion of music, the professor walks away dejected that he will never hear the
beauty of what could have been. It is thus
with great surprise he learns of Subtilius escape. But even more surprising is when the escapee
turns up in his study one evening with a deal too sweet to pass up.
Strength or weakness (depending what expectations and
reading experiences the reader brings to the book), A Small Price for Birdsong is a surface reading of morals in continual
response to an unraveling situation—this thing we call life. I say ‘surface reading’ as Parker’s narrative
rarely scratches the surface of emotion or feeling, for example like Dostoevsky’s
Crime and Punishment, but instead
allows circumstance and behavior to dictate the story’s flow, and ultimately
the message. Honesty playing its part in
the story’s success, the novella possesses the color of human morality: gray, but
just not the emotional depth it could.
The only quibble with the novella is the everyday, untidy
delivery. See the following passage:
“Afterwards, the marquis got up and thanked me–as soon as he
joined me on the podium, the sun must’ve come out from behind a cloud or
something, because the light through the windows suddenly changed from red to
blue, and instead of burning, we were drowning–and then the provost of the
university presented me with an honorary doctorate, which was nice of him, and
made a long speech about integrity in the creative arts. The audience got a bit
restive, but I was getting paid for being there, so I didn’t mind a bit.”
In this
paragraph can be found numerous extraneous bits and pieces: ‘must’ve’, ‘or
something’, ‘which was nice of him’, and ‘a bit’. This is not the voice of the land’s most
renowned music scholar and composer. Yet
the entire story—presented in the first-person as it is—possesses this same
quotidian tone. I realize this is
personal preference and will end it at that; I’m sure such continual winks and
nods are precisely what endear Parker to many.
In the
end, A
Small Price for Birdsong is a strong tale
of human morality in a Medieval-esque scene featuring composers of juxtaposed
creative attitudes. No proselytizing,
Parker lets the circumstances and characters define one view of competition,
forgiveness, shame, motivation, and everything between, leaving the reader to
ponder over the meaning in the afterglow.
Though it is told in the first-person, the novella nevertheless would be
a nice introduction to Parker’s work for any who have not encountered it
before. For existing fans it simply is a must read.
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