Skip to Main Content (Press Enter)
The Partnership by Pamela Katz
Add The Partnership to bookshelf
Add to Bookshelf

The Partnership

Best Seller
The Partnership by Pamela Katz
Ebook
Jan 06, 2015 | ISBN 9780385534925

Buy from Other Retailers:

See All Formats (1) +
  • $24.00

    Dec 08, 2015 | ISBN 9780307744166

    Buy from Other Retailers:

  • Jan 06, 2015 | ISBN 9780385534925

    Buy from Other Retailers:

Product Details

Praise

“Readable, engaging and fair-minded. . . . Vividly re-creates not just these remarkable men but also the women who contributed so mightily to their reputations.” —Los Angeles Times

“Katz restores the women to their proper place in the story, with levity, strong characterization, and beguiling descriptions of an interwar German milieu crackling with politics, art, and a sense of possibility.”  —The New Yorker

“[Katz’s] work as a novelist and screenwriter helps her keep the pacing swift and the prose dynamic—the chapters on the creation of The Threepenny Opera are almost unbearably suspenseful. . . . She offers a real and empathetic sense of how Brecht and Weill walked and spoke and dressed.” —The New York Times

“Katz richly conjures the domestic, class, social, and political environs in which Brecht and Weill developed. . . . Through Katz’s insightful and penetrating prose, they all blaze and dazzle as they did in life.” —Booklist
 
“Katz is extremely good at capturing the centrality of Lenya, Hauptmann, and Weigel in the creation of Brecht and Weill’s collaborations. . . . Katz’s group biography . . . may make it possible to love and fear Brecht anew.” —Bookforum

“[Katz] clearly identifies the stakes of Brecht and Weill’s joint project, connecting it to the historical tumults unfolding around them.” —San Francisco Chronicle

“The culture of Weimar Germany is at its most provocative and profound in this scintillating portrait of its leading theatrical luminaries…. Katz gives an uproarious view of the ferment of interwar Berlin’s theatrical avant-garde, with Brecht’s tantrums, power plays, preening demands, and ideological conceits. But she also takes seriously the artistic and political ideas that drove Brecht and Weill to their innovations (and eventually estranged them). The result is a thoughtful, entertaining recreation of a watershed moment in 20th-century theater.” —Publishers Weekly

“Deft, incisive cultural history… With a novelist’s eye for telling details, Katz offers a colorful, perceptive and riveting portrait of a remarkable artistic partnership.” —Kirkus Reviews

Looking for More Great Reads?
21 Books You’ve Been Meaning to Read
Back to Top