DISSONANCE
by Barbara Burt
This title was previously available on NetGalley and is now archived.
Send NetGalley books directly to your Kindle or Kindle app
1
To read on a Kindle or Kindle app, please add kindle@netgalley.com as an approved email address to receive files in your Amazon account. Click here for step-by-step instructions.
2
Also find your Kindle email address within your Amazon account, and enter it here.
Pub Date 31 Jan 2023 | Archive Date 19 Mar 2023
Talking about this book? Use #DISSONANCE #NetGalley. More hashtag tips!
Description
Allegra Brewster, cellist and newly minted arts administrator, finds herself torn between keeping her job with the SummerFest Symphony and her loyalty to its musicians. The tension rises to a higher level when she discovers the death of a central person in the conflict. Many people with ill feelings toward the victim are potential murder suspects, but it is her father upon whom the police focus their attention.
Set at a fictional summer music festival in coastal Maine, Dissonance explores the struggle between a nonprofit arts board and its musicians, wealthy summer people and locals, a besotted suitor and the former girlfriend he betrayed, and a young woman’s faith in her own detective skills and the obvious fact that someone close to her committed murder.
Filled with music references (and accompanied by a Spotify playlist), Dissonance brings the reader into the world of a summer orchestra, its musicians and supporters, and the small town they occupy.
Advance Praise
"Dissonance has the parameters of a crime-solving story with a handful of potential suspects, each having possible motives for committing the crime. Readers are treated to a whodunit game as the sleuthing protagonist digs deeper, obsessed with uncovering the truth, especially when her father becomes the prime suspect. Barbara Burt builds strong emotional involvement, as she not only explores the mystery behind the murder but also Allie’s relationship with the people in her small town and her father. Burt’s supporting characters are not deceptive but simply pushed into living their lives and protecting their existence. Dissonance has the kind of mysterious suspense that makes it engaging, and fans of the genre will enjoy reading this story." -- Vincent Deblado, 5-star review in Readers' Favorite
Available Editions
ISBN | 9798987238301 |
PRICE | US$7.99 (USD) |
PAGES | 358 |
Links
Featured Reviews
A mystery set at a fictional musical festival in Maine. Allegra is a cellist and working as well with the summer festival being thrown in Maine. However, conflict is brewing there and then one of the people involved in the dispute ends up dead. Allegra must solve the mystery even if it means suspecting those she is close to. A great mystery for music lovers!
I thoroughly enjoyed this little romp in Maine!
I was craving a cozy mystery and this definitely fit the bill. Multiple POV with most of it following Allie was a fun way to get to know the town and the musicians who would be coming in the summer. I always love a book with a playlist and this one references classical abc contemporary music alike.
The murder doesn’t come until about 35%. I didn’t mind all the set up but I did double check that there was in fact murder involved.
Allegra Brewster has returned to her childhood home to take her first 'real' job post-graduate school. She has just earned a Master's degree in arts management and is employed as an assistant to the director of the local summer arts (music) festival in her small town in coastal Maine. She is also a cellist. She has been involved with the festival since she was a kid and her father is on the board. When the story opens, there is trouble brewing. The director, Dr Sylvia Abbott (a geologist) has decided that the financial situation requires the musicians to take a 35% pay cut, add free performances to the schedule, and reapply for their positions by writing an essay about what the festival means to them. What she is really trying to do is break the musicians union. Her thinking is that they will be outraged, strike, and turn the townspeople against them. She manages to get most of the other board members to go along with this plan, but Allegra's father, David, holds out.
Time passes and events unfold. The festival rolls around once again, but this time someone will not be around to see the end of it. With so many people around, any number of people could have committed the murder and suspicion falls on various people in turn, including on David. Allegra and her ex-boyfriend, Luke, start snooping around since the police detective has some bigotry issues that cloud his judgement.
Music is a huge part of this book--almost a character in and of itself. This was one reason why the book was appealing to me when I read the description and I was not disappointed. Allegra turns to music to help her through tough times and to suit her mood. Many songs are mentioned in the book and there is a Spotify playlist that goes with the book. I have looked up some of the music mentioned and found it on YouTube. I am more interested in cello music now than I was before reading this book, which I am thrilled about. I feel like that's one of the gifts of the book for me--more music to discover. Also, I am fascinated by the ways in which people find and cultivate their passions in life, no matter what they are, but particularly in creative endeavors. I've done life story work with artists and craftswomen where they talked about this, so this was a very appealing part of the book for me.
The story was well-written and interesting. I enjoyed the backstories of the characters, although in one case the way this was presented seemed a bit like it was just plunked down out of nowhere in a short chapter in order to justify what came next. Really, that was my only quibble with the book and it didn't detract from my reading experience. I found myself immersed in the story from the beginning and when I had to set the book aside I was eager to get back to it. The ending was plausible and unexpected. It's a really good read, which I heartily recommend.
I received a copy of the e-book from NetGalley in exchange for a review. I thank them, the publisher, and the author.
Dissonance is the perfect title for this delicious murder mystery set at a music festival in the small town of Kennimac, Maine. The SummerFest Symphony, founded by David Brewster, has been successful for years. For six weeks, tourists fill Kennimac enjoying carefully planned and rehearsed performances. Now David is on the Board of Directors and his daughter Allie is the assistant executive director. When the Chairman of the Board, the supremely unlikable Sylvia Abbott, proposes that the musicians take a large pay cut and audition for the positions they have held for many summers, dissonance is an understatement. A murder opens the new season and there are almost as many suspects as there are musicians in the orchestra. Allie becomes involved when her father is considered a suspect and must find the killer to clear his reputation.
Barbara Burt dedicates A Novel of Music and Murder “For all the readers who love music and all the musicians who love books…” She could add And for everyone who loves a good, well-written mystery! Dissonance is superb. The clash between the logical Board of Directors and the creative musicians naturally leads to threats of violence. While solving a murder, Allie is attracted to both a former boyfriend and a handsome new assistant conductor. Dissonance is fun to read whether you are a musician or a reader! 5 Stars.
Thank you to NetGalley, BooksGoSocial and Barbara Burt for this ARC.
A Mystery in Maine! Cozy mysteries seem like super popular reads these days and this one definitely is exactly that! This book does have multiple POV, so if that is something that is difficult for you to follow along with then this book might not be for you! The story is centered around a music festival and the murder doesn't happen right away, there is a lot of background information you are given first before the plot thickens. If you play an instrument or love music and a cozy mystery then you would probably enjoy this book!
It was great to read a thrilling detective story with a full soundtrack of classical and more popular songs sprinkled all over. I enjoyed the plot, tried to narrow the list of suspects... The few chapters suddenly describing in great details the future possible murder weapons were a little too obvious but because they were multiple it didn't completely give away the killer.
It was appreciated that each character had a little chapter about their past and feelings to give them a little depth.
Typos: I think the ones in the text messages are on purpose, but there is a him instead of his in the chapter 74, that's the only one that I found.
Each chapter is very short, keeping a fast pace to the story and making it easy to read while commuting.
The Spotify playlist is a great addition to the book.
Thanks Netgalley for giving me a free version of this book for a honest review.
This was one of those rare books that just tickled a forgotten part of my brain in the best way. I was a violist from age 9 all the way through college, and often picked up an instrument or tuned in to some classical music as a way to decompress my more science-heavy studying (and activate my right brain!) well into my late 20’s. Between work, kids, and the daily grind, time spent closing my eyes and enjoying a melancholy cello solo gave way to 100 Top Disney Hits and surgery podcasts 😅
But no longer! This mystery is delightfully music-themed, with multiple references to classical music pieces and a cast full of quirky, complex musicians. Allegra, our protagonist, is the administrator of a nonprofit arts board in coastal Maine. Each summer, the town hosts a festival with an orchestra composed of talented artists from across the country. This year is expected to be different, and not necessarily in a good way, when a shocking murder rocks both the music world and the small town. When Allie’s own father is identified as the prime suspect, she has to think fast to find the real murderer before it’s too late.
This was definitely a fun, old-fashioned whodunnit. There were plenty of red herrings, questionable motives, and worthy suspects before the killer is finally revealed. One 𝘪𝘯𝘤𝘳𝘦𝘥𝘪𝘣𝘭𝘺 charming detail is that the author has built a Spotify playlist with all of the music referenced in the book, which I truly, truly enjoyed!! I’ll definitely use this read as a reminder to stop and smell the roses (or listen to some classical music) more often!
Readers who liked this book also liked:
Carine Laforest, illustrations by Animation Cafe
Children's Fiction