Jennifer Atkins appears on Granta’s Best of Young British Novelists
A piercing meditation on love and music, and the silence and inscrutability which underpins the performance of each
Luc has lived a long time as a soloist. She has not seen Billy for many years. A visit to a major show of his sculptures sends her arrowing back to younger version of herself: to a time when she had to make room to love him when she’d felt no room within herself. To a time when she was forced to make a choice between being one thing or another. To a time when he was a sculptor, but she was not yet a cellist.
In exquisite and crystalline prose, The Cellist explores how you might make room for beauty and mastery for yourself, and still leave space for someone else. It asks what love and companionship costs: what happens when you are forced to cast yourself in the distorting light of another person’s needs?
'A novel of rare emotional acuity that explores a life lived in pursuit of artistic perfection, and measures the cost.' - Matthew Sperling
'In precisem rigorous prose, this book mounts a defence of the search for sustenance through artistic practice. Atkins traces the fine lines, ruptures, and returns of an artist falling in love and refusing to make romance her organising principle, and shows the bashing a personal life can take in the pursuit of certainty. The Cellist is an honest and ambitious work.' - Lucie Elven