Sean Michaels is a writer and music critic. A two-time National Magazine Award winner, his work has been published by the "Guardian," "McSweeney's," the "Walrus," "Brick," "Pitchfork," "The Believer," and many other outlets. In 2003, he founded the music-blog Said the Gramophone. He lives in Montreal.
*Winner of the 2014 Giller Prize
*"Us Conductors" makes "NPR's" 2014 Best of the Year list
*Chosen as an Indies Introduce pick
*"Flavorwire" picks "US Conductors" as one of the 50 best
independent fiction and poetry books of 2014
""Us Conductors" is an impressive debut, a novel as somber and
haunting as the voice of the theremin itself."
Friends of Atticus
"Both the voice and the stories it tells transcend the dusty
contrivances of much historical fiction, resulting in a novel that
feels both fresh and timeless."
Kirkus Starred Review
""Us Conductors" stretches its arms to encompass nearly everything
it is an immigrant tale, an epic, a spy intrigue, a prison
confession, an inventor's manual, a creation myth, and an
obituarybut the electric current humming through its heart is an
achingly resonant love story. Sean Michaels orchestrates his first
novel like a virtuoso."
Anthony Marra, author of "A Constellation of Vital Phenomena"
A fascinating novel! Told with grace and confidence, and in a
finely wrought voice, "Us Conductors" kept surprising me to the
end. I was swept from the speakeasies and artistic fervor of 1930s
Manhattan to bleak, secretive Soviet Union prisons, and never once
was the illusion shattered. Throughout the story, the themes of
love and music sing like the pure, ethereal notes of the
theremin.
Eowyn Ivey, author of the "New York Times" bestseller "The Snow
Child"
DZEEEEOOOoo! Just as hard as it is to make a theremin sing so it is
hard to pull off a novel like this. But Sean Michaels does it. "Us
Conductors" bridges body and soul, science and art, and like
theremin music, it s of this world and magical at the same
time.
Ismet Prcic, author of "Shards"
I ve been awaiting a book by Sean Michaels for a decade, ever since
he helped create not only the online MP3 blog but his own form of
criticismimaginative, bird-like devices of prose that soar in and
out of the paths of songs. In his novel, "Us Conductors," Michaels
finds his ideal subject in another inventor, the enigmatic Leon
Termen, who with softly lit-up wisdom calls himself a sound being
sounded, music being made, amid the noise of history. Michaels s
voice will pass through you like live current and conduct you to
parts unknown.
Carl Wilson, music critic for Slate.com and author of "Let s Talk
About Love: Why Other People Have Such Bad Taste"
"Sean Michaels has chosen an engrossing subject in Lev Termen, the
Russian scientist and spy, most famous for his invention of the
unusual instrument, the theremin. Michaels details Termen's rise to
fame, his trips around Europe and America to demonstrate his
creation (bankrolled by the Russian government and not without its
costs), as well as his new life in the States and subsequent
incarceration in a Russian gulag following a shift in relations
with his homeland. "Us Conductors" is engaging throughout. A
fascinating look at a fascinating man."
Liberty Hardy, RiverRun Bookstore
""Doctor Zhivago" meets "The Great Gatsby" in this lyrical novel in
which the charming and magnetic inventor of the theremin is torn
between the poles of capitalism and communism."
David Enyeart, Common Good Books
"Probably best known as founder of the influential music blog "Said
the Gramophone," Michaels debut novel fictionalizes the life of Lev
Termen scientist, spy and inventor of the theremin, an ethereal and
eerie musical instrument."
"National Post"
"Hipsters and the tragically indie know Sean Michaels as the
founder of music blog Said the Gramophone. In April, he ll release
his debut novel, "Us Conductors," a fictionalization of the life of
the inventor of the theremin. Yeah, I m not sure either, but
Michaels writes about music with care and attention, so I m
interested to see where this goes."
Bookriot
"Music blogger Sean Michaels has written a lushly imagined
biography of the Soviet inventor of the theremin, one of the first
electronic instruments."
"Toronto Life"
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