欧宝娱乐

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袝泻褋褌邪蟹

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袙 斜谢褟褋泻邪胁懈褟 褋胁褟褌 薪邪 袙懈械薪邪 胁 薪邪褔邪谢芯褌芯 薪邪 20-褌懈 胁械泻 械写薪邪 卸械薪邪 褖械 芯褔械褉褌邪械 薪芯胁邪 械锌芯褏邪 懈 褖械 芯褌锌褉邪胁懈 锌褉械写懈蟹胁懈泻邪褌械谢褋褌胁芯 泻褗屑 薪械褟.

袗谢屑邪 楔懈薪写谢械褉, 写褗褖械褉褟 薪邪 褏褍写芯卸薪懈泻, 械 泻褉邪褋懈胁邪, 胁谢褞斜械薪邪 胁 锌芯械蟹懈褟褌邪, 褌械邪褌褗褉邪 懈 谢懈褌械褉邪褌褍褉邪褌邪, 褌邪谢邪薪褌谢懈胁邪 锌懈邪薪懈褋褌泻邪 懈 泻芯屑锌芯蟹懈褌芯褉泻邪. 袗谢屑邪 械 薪邪 写械胁械褌薪邪泄褋械褌, 泻芯谐邪褌芯 蟹邪 锌褗褉胁懈 锌褗褌 褟 褑械谢褍胁邪 屑褗卸 鈥� 薪械 泻芯泄 写邪 械, 邪 锌褉芯褔褍褌懈褟褌 袚褍褋褌邪胁 袣谢懈屑褌. 小褌褉邪褋褌薪邪褌邪 褑械谢褍胁泻邪 锌褉芯斜褍卸写邪 卸械薪邪褌邪 胁 薪械褟 懈 褌褟 褉邪蟹斜懈褉邪, 褔械 写邪 褋械 芯褌褉械褔械 芯褌 卸懈胁芯褌 斜械蟹 谢褞斜芯胁 褖械 械 屑褗褔懈褌械谢薪芯 泻邪褌芯 写邪 褋械 芯褌褉械褔械 芯褌 屑褍蟹懈泻邪褌邪, 泻芯褟褌芯 胁械褔械 械 薪械泄薪邪褌邪 褋褌褉邪褋褌. 袣芯屑锌芯蟹懈褌芯褉褗褌 袚褍褋褌邪胁 袦邪谢械褉 褋械 胁谢褞斜胁邪 胁 薪械褟 芯褌 锌褉褗胁 锌芯谐谢械写 懈 褋邪屑芯 褋谢械写 褋械写屑懈褑邪 褲 锌褉械写谢邪谐邪 斜褉邪泻, 邪谢邪 锌褉懈 械写薪芯 褍褋谢芯胁懈械 鈥� 写邪 蟹邪谐褗褉斜懈 屑褍蟹懈泻邪谢薪邪褌邪 褋懈 泻邪褉懈械褉邪 懈 写邪 斜褗写械 褋邪屑芯 褋褗锌褉褍谐邪 懈 屑邪泄泻邪. 袩褉械写懈 写邪 泻邪卸械 鈥炐葱扳€�, 褌褟 褉械褕邪胁邪, 褔械 械写懈薪褋褌胁械薪懈褟褌 泻芯屑锌褉芯屑懈褋 械 写邪 褋械 芯屑褗卸懈 蟹邪 胁械谢懈泻 褌胁芯褉械褑 懈 写邪 褋锌芯写械谢懈 褋褗写斜邪褌邪 屑褍. 袘褉邪泻褗褌 褋械 芯泻邪蟹胁邪 斜褍褉械薪, 薪芯 懈蟹褏芯写 薪褟屑邪 鈥� 袦邪谢械褉 械 芯斜褋械斜械薪 芯褌 褋褗锌褉褍谐邪褌邪 褋懈. 袗谢屑邪 褌褗褉褋懈 褍褌械褏邪 胁 谢褞斜芯胁薪邪 胁褉褗蟹泻邪 褋 锌褉芯褔褍褌懈褟 邪褉褏懈褌械泻褌 袙邪谢褌械褉 袚褉芯锌懈褍褋, 泻芯泄褌芯 械 蟹邪谐褍斜懈谢 褍屑邪 褋懈 锌芯 薪械褟, 锌芯褋谢械 鈥� 胁 锌褉械谐褉褗写泻懈褌械 薪邪 锌懈褋邪褌械谢褟 肖褉邪薪褑 袙械褉褎械谢, 芯锌懈褋胁邪褖 褟 泻邪褌芯 鈥炐敌葱叫� 芯褌 屑邪谢泻芯褌芯 胁褗谢褕械斜薪懈 卸械薪懈 薪邪 褌芯蟹懈 褋胁褟褌鈥�. 袠 写胁邪屑邪褌邪 褋邪 蟹邪锌谢械薪械薪懈 芯褌 薪械褟, 褌褟 械 褌褟褏薪邪褌邪 屑褍蟹邪 懈 胁械褉芯褟褌薪芯 薪邪泄-谐芯谢褟屑邪褌邪 懈屑 谢褞斜芯胁.

鈥炐曅貉佈傂靶封€� 鈥� 懈褋褌芯褉懈褟褌邪 薪邪 械写薪邪 芯褌 薪邪泄-锌褉芯褌懈胁芯褉械褔懈胁懈褌械 懈 屑薪芯谐芯谢懈泻懈 卸械薪懈 薪邪 褋胁芯械褌芯 胁褉械屑械, 锌芯褋褌邪胁懈谢邪 薪邪 泻芯谢械薪械 屑薪芯谐芯 谐械薪懈邪谢薪懈 褌胁芯褉褑懈.

352 pages, Paperback

First published April 10, 2018

182 people are currently reading
4442 people want to read

About the author

Mary Sharratt

14books482followers
Mary Sharratt is an American writer who lives with her Belgian husband in the Pendle region of Lancashire, England, the setting for her acclaimed 2010 novel, DAUGHTERS OF THE WITCHING HILL, which recasts the Pendle Witches of 1612 in their historical context as cunning folk and healers.

Previously she lived for twelve years in Germany. This, along with her interest in sacred music and herbal medicine, inspired her to write her most recent novel, ILLUMINATIONS: A NOVEL OF HILDEGARD VON BINGEN, which explores the dramatic life of the 12th century Benedictine abbess, composer, polymath, and powerfrau.

Winner of the 2005 WILLA Literary Award and a Minnesota Book Award Finalist, Mary has also written the acclaimed novels SUMMIT AVENUE (Coffee House 2000), THE REAL MINERVA (Houghton Mifflin 2004), THE VANISHING POINT (Houghton Mifflin 2006), and co-edited the subversive fiction anthology BITCH LIT (Crocus Books 2006), which celebrates female anti-heroes--strong women who break all the rules. Her short fiction has been published in TWIN CITIES NOIR (Akashic Books 2006).

Mary writes regular articles for Historical Novels Review and Solander on the theme of writing women back into history. When she isn't writing, she's usually riding her spirited Welsh mare through the Lancashire countryside.







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5 stars
292 (25%)
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434 (38%)
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298 (26%)
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83 (7%)
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30 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 217 reviews
Profile Image for Elyse Walters.
4,010 reviews11.8k followers
March 12, 2018
鈥淟et鈥檚 raise our glasses to Alma Maria Schindler, Fran Zuckerandl said, who has turned the rest of us poor women emerald with envy. Not only is she the most beautiful girl in Vienna, and that鈥檚 quite bad enough, she鈥檚 also a brilliant pianist. That鈥檚 infuriating. But on top of it all, she composes!鈥�

Alma鈥檚 mother was pregnant with Alma 鈥榖efore鈥� she married her famous painter father, Jakob Schindler. She tells Alma that she 鈥榟ad鈥� to get married. Alma was in love with a man named Alex Zeminsky - a poor man. Alma鈥檚 mother literally forbid her daughter to choose her own husband.....she did everything she could to stop the romance between she and Alex. Her mother told Alma about her childhood of poverty, and the financial struggles during the early years of marriage to her father.
Alma 鈥榳as鈥� conflicted. The pressure of how Alma should live her live was constant.

Mother had two wishes for Alma:
1- that she didn鈥檛 marry for money without love
2- that she didn鈥檛 marry for love without money.

Alma had two wishes for herself:
1- that she didn鈥檛 have to sacrifice her art for Love
2- that she didn鈥檛 have to sacrifice love for for art.

Alma wanted to give herself completely to a man and she wanted to give yourself completely to music. She wished to be a composer - of the great symphonies. She had the talent and practiced diligently.

At age 19, when Alma received her first kiss by Gustav Klimt- it was so passionate- physically- and soulfully - (the author did a lovely job conveying this young girls 鈥榓wakening鈥� experience of lust & passion)....that Alma knew that to deny herself a life without love would be as painful as to deny herself with music ( which was already her lustful passion).
Having 鈥榖oth鈥� - love and her independence to follow her dreams - as a female in the 19th/20th century, was a complicated matter.
The man she married - Gustav Mahler- wanted her to regard his music, be his wife, but not his colleague. He didn鈥檛 want Alma to be a composer because he was one.
Alma knew if she married him, and carried on composing behind his back, it would still destroy her creative spirit.
Alma鈥檚 final thinking - before marrying Mahler.... was is that the only way there was any hope of distinguishing herself and doing anything remarkable at all in life was to marry a great man and share his destiny. I WANTED TO DIE AT THIS MOMENT in the novel....scream at Alma. I saw her spirit breaking - understood her thinking -but was sad.
Much more storytelling to come 鈥� and tensions keep building.

The book is about 400 pages - but reading flies by. I knew next to nothing about Alma Mahler and her excruciating battles of the times both from society & those closest to her. I learned a lot and enjoyed the journey.

I absolutely loved reading this historical novel. I was transported back to this period. There鈥檚 interesting history, personal storytelling, drama, passion, Love, conflicts, and the music. Just delightful!

Thank You to Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, Netgalley, and Mary Sharratt
Profile Image for Julie .
4,212 reviews38.1k followers
May 6, 2018



Ecstasy by Mary Sharratt is a 2018 Houghton Mifflin Harcourt publication.

This story is a fictionalized accounting of composer and pianist Alma Schindler鈥檚 life during the period she was married to famed composer Gustav Mahler. As a condition of her marriage, Alma promised her husband, she would give up her own music and channel all her passion for music through his compositions and successes, which eventually takes her down the path of depression and melancholy, and into the arms of another man.

痴颈别苍苍补鈥�

It doesn鈥檛 seem to matter what kind of story I鈥檓 reading- if Vienna is the location- It immediately puts me into an entirely different mood. There is just something so atmospheric about it, so romantic and steeped in incredible history- especially from an artistic standpoint. This book was no exception. I willingly allowed myself to fall dreamily into the angst ridden, highly dramatic, often tragic life of Alma Schindler Gustuv. Alma was a talented composer, someone who swore she would never succumb to traditional married life, always putting her music first- until she fell in love with Gustuv Mahler.

This story follows the impulsive Alma as she struggles through her teenage years, where she copes with the way her mother demurs to her new husband, and the addition to their family of a younger brother, as well as her sister鈥檚 struggle with mental illness. While Alma's often petulant and selfish, she is also a great romantic and feels things deeply.

She falls in and out of love easily enough, but did seem to have a tremendous depth of feeling for Gustuv who was more self -absorbed than Alma ever thought of being. Despite his dismissive attitude towards her, she lives for those periods of great passion between them. It was an amazing journey Alma took, as she suffered from discontent, boredom, and pent up creative power that left her frustrated and badly in need of release.

The story and the marriage between Alma and Gustuv reads like a musical composition at times with staccato and legato, diminuendo, and crescendos, Molto and Sempre, melody and harmony. I enjoyed the high drama, I must say. If this had been a strictly fictional book, I may have rolled my eyes at some of the intense emotional turmoil Alma was always on the verge of, thinking it just a little bit too melodramatic or over the top, but since this story is based on true events, it proves that life often is packed with more high -pitched angst than we want to admit. Artists of all forms seem more prone to those fits of agony and mania, but I鈥檒l keep this in mind the next time I become exasperated by an overwrought heroine.

I also enjoyed Alma journey back to the place where she was able to take charge of her life and music again, was able to express herself musically and artistically, feeling more fulfilled and more independent, perhaps learning that lesson the hard way. In the end, Alma was more of a trailblazer for women than she is credited with, eventually leaving behind her own musical legacy, despite her continual attraction to men driven by their careers.

Many of you, myself included, will want to know more about Alma鈥檚 life after reading this book. It is interesting to note, that she often maintained her role as muse, becoming the subject of plays, books, and movies. While there are plenty of resources to choose from, the truth of Alma鈥檚 life is often speculative, elusive, and the subject of much debate.

This is quick, fascinating read, I found to be quite interesting and very absorbing.

4 stars
Profile Image for Jennifer ~ TarHeelReader.
2,595 reviews31.8k followers
April 8, 2018
5 alluring stars to Ecstasy! 猸愶笍 猸愶笍 猸愶笍 猸愶笍 猸愶笍

(Last vacation review, I promise! 馃槈)

In college, I had a poster of Klimt鈥檚 painting, The Kiss, hanging on my dorm room wall. It was sultry and magical. My love for art and art history was sparked by my beloved high school art teacher. I think she saw a lack of confidence in me, and in retrospect, I feel she took every opportunity to bring that out. I yearn for books about art as a result, especially in my favorite genre, historical fiction. All of that to say, when I saw Ecstasy鈥檚 cover and the synopsis, I knew I had to read this book.

Set at the turn of the twentieth century in Vienna, Ecstasy is the story of a most-intriguing woman, Alma Schindler. Daughter of an artist, Alma is not only a brilliant pianist, she is a talented composer. She has the opportunity to seek further training to become a star composer, but her mother would not let her because she was female.

Alma鈥檚 first kiss was by none other than Gustav Klimt. She later marries Gustav Mahler, a composer, who forbids her music and wants her to be a wife and mother. Married for many years, Alma and Mahler have an up and down marriage, but Mahler is quite obsessed with Alma. She has an affair with Walter Gropius, a famous architect, and later moves on to Franz Werfel, novelist and poet. Schindler has each of these men entranced with her. She is the muse for each and probably the greatest love.

Ecstasy is very much about Alma鈥檚 coming of age during a time when women had strict expectations, but culturally and creatively, an era of possibility was simultaneously opening up, and Alma fully embraces it. She is a woman ahead of her time, testing the boundaries that try to contain her, jumping over them, and flourishing with possibilities that she creates for herself.

Alma Schindler had a full life, and in reading her life鈥檚 story, I had to be patient with the details and settle in to this book. When one woman is a composer, an author, a daughter, a mother, a wife, a lover, and a muse for various artists, there is much content to be shared! I found Alma enchanting and energizing, and I wish that more people knew her story.

Thank you to Mary Sharratt, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, and Edelweiss for the ARC. Ecstasy will be released on April 10, 2018.
Profile Image for Magdalena aka A Bookaholic Swede.
2,023 reviews869 followers
April 23, 2018
I saw the movie Mahler by Ken Russell a couple of years ago. Well, it's so many years ago that I don't really remember much about it. But, it was my first introduction to Gustav Mahler and his wife Alma. So, when I saw that there would be a book about Alma Mahler was I instantly interested. I was thrilled when I got a copy of this book to read.

Just think of what Alma Schindler could have achieved if she was born decades later when a woman could be much more than a wife and a mother. She dreamed of becoming a composer, but her mother and stepfather (mostly stepfather) didn't think higher education would be something for her since she was a woman and wasting money on an education for her was nothing he wanted since his opinion was that her role in life getting married and have children. Alma, however, wanted to compose, to be something. Then, Gustav Mahler enters her life, and she falls in love with him. However, he demands that she gives up her music to dedicate her life to their marriage and his needs. And, she does that. She suffocates the part of herself that loves music, but how can she be complete when part of her, the creative part of her has to be subdued? When her life is only to be a wife and mother? It doesn't, and it's just tragic that when they finally find themselves true to each other, Gustav and Alma is time running out for them...

This book would have been at least twice as thick (or more) if Mary Sharratt has written about Almas whole life, not just her marriage to Mahler. And, I would have read it. I loved the book from the very start. I loved getting to know Alma Mahler, this extraordinary woman that had such a fantastic life. I loved how Alma finally has come out of the shadows of the famous men she was married to. To show the world that she was a great composer as well.
Profile Image for Annette.
920 reviews560 followers
June 9, 2020
Alma Maria Schindler (1879-1964) was a Viennese-born composer. She was musically active from her early years, only to have it suppressed by a famous composer and one of the leading conductors of the time, and later her husband Gustav Mahler. She composed at least 17 songs, which are actively performed and recorded. According to her diary, she composed over 100 songs, but it is unknown if maybe they were destroyed during WWII, when she was fleeing Austria for US.

1899, Vienna, Austria. This story starts with Alma at the age of 19, when she dreams about composing an opera 鈥� something no woman had ever done.

Her stepfather, Carl Moll, was the Secession鈥檚 vice president. The Vienna Secession art movement was the best-known and included Gustav Klimt, Max Klinger, and Fernand Khnopff. This was her stepfather鈥檚 circle, artists of unique style, who broke from tradition. And this is how she got to know Gustav Klimt, 37 at the time, who becomes her first love.

When Alma鈥檚 stepfather refuses to pay for her to study at the Vienna Conservatory, it fuels even a bigger fire inside her to succeed. Her lessons continue with Alexander von Zemlinsky, a talented composer and conductor.

Then, she meets Gustav Mahler and everything changes. She dreams of them composing side by side like Robert and Clara Schumann. But he couldn鈥檛 be clearer that such thing will never happen as he needs her as his wife and not his colleague. She is torn, but his genius touches her to the core.

鈥溾€alent in itself was not enough. One must be brave enough to seize one鈥檚 gift and go to battle for it. (鈥�) Was she courageous enough鈥︹€�?

She suspects that 鈥渟he would end up serving a man anyway.鈥� Why not 鈥渢o serve genius instead of mediocrity?鈥� Is she to become 鈥淎 mere footnote to his brilliance?鈥�

Gustav accepts a position in NYC, where Alma meets Natalie Curtis. 鈥淪he鈥檚 an ethnomusicologist and lived for years with the Hopi Indians in Arizona. She鈥檚 written two books on Indian culture, and she鈥檚 also a composer.鈥� Alma is flabbergasted. 鈥淗ow truly democratic America is. (鈥�) 鈥� never had Alma imagined that a woman could be this free, this intrepid, this bold. Only in America.鈥�

To Alma鈥檚 another surprise, 鈥淭his being America, the president of the New York Philharmonic was a woman.鈥�

The author vividly portrays a woman who was musically talented, but was forced to choose. She couldn鈥檛 be a wife and pursue her career. It was her duty as a wife to support her husband and his career. This only resulted in her artistic soul dying inside her and being depressed.
Profile Image for Cathy.
1,389 reviews321 followers
May 7, 2018
Read more reviews like this, plus fascinating author interviews, exclusive guest posts and book extracts, on my blog:

Alma is beautiful, passionate and independent-minded, fond of poetry, drama and literature and a talented pianist. She also shows a talent for composition and harbours an ambition to be recognised as a composer of her own music. However, she is prevented from following her dreams by the constraints of society and the expectations placed on her of marriage and motherhood. It鈥檚 a time when women鈥檚 talents and achievements are downplayed or, worse, characterised as 鈥榰nfeminine鈥�.

Alma鈥檚 admiration for composers and artists of the day is reciprocated by, amongst others, Klimt and Zemlinsky. They are attracted by her beauty and her lively conversation. Neither of these are suitable marriage prospects, however, and by the time she is twenty-one, Alma feels in 鈥榮tasis鈥�, unfulfilled and overwhelmed by an awakening sexuality that she is unable to express. Her only solace is in music.

Enter Gustav Mahler, the renowned conductor and composer who is as entranced by Alma as she is with his musical talent. However, when his offer of marriage comes it is accompanied by a condition that will mean Alma sacrificing her own ambitions for her husband鈥檚 work and career. Despite the age difference, warnings from those close to her and her own misgivings about the bargain she is making, Alma accepts his offer of marriage. Heartbreaking tragedy, illness and separation from friends and family will make Alma鈥檚 and Gustav鈥檚 marriage at times a tempestuous affair. As Alma鈥檚 mother notes: 鈥淟ove and marriage. It鈥檚 so much more complicated than people realize.鈥�

I really enjoyed Ecstasy, not least because, in one of those moments of serendipity, I attended a concert of Mahler鈥檚 Second Symphony a few nights before starting the book. Described in the programme as 鈥榤onumental鈥�, it鈥檚 certainly epic. With the biggest orchestra I鈥檝e ever seen, including some offstage, a symphony chorus and two soloists, the composer throws in pretty much everything but the kitchen sink. However, we didn鈥檛 have the five minute pause between the first and second movements that Mahler insisted on for its first performance, which Alma witnesses in the book.

There鈥檚 something I find fascinating about reading of the lives of women who married famous men, albeit fictionalised accounts, because, in almost all cases, it strikes me they were often just as accomplished, if not more, than the men they married. Yet, like, Alma, they were expected to channel their talents into supporting their husbands, being the perfect hostess and doting mother. Reading Ecstasy made we wonder if great talent, like that of Gustav Mahler, can ever excuse selfishness and the often casual disregard for those around them.

This is a book rich in historical detail and I loved the way the author evoked the sights and atmosphere of turn of the century Vienna (a city I have visited and really loved) and its musicians, artists and poets. I also found engaging Alma鈥檚 wonder at the sophistication of New York when she and Gustav travel there to pursue his career. As the author notes in her afterword, Alma led a full life even after the events covered in the novel. I can only agree with Mary Sharratt when she writes: 鈥楾he deeper I delved into Alma鈥檚 story, the more complex and compelling her character revealed itself to be.鈥�

I received a review copy courtesy of publishers, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, and Historical Fiction Virtual Book Tours in return for an honest and unbiased review.
Profile Image for Amy Bruno.
364 reviews542 followers
Want to read
December 20, 2017
Author Mary Sharratt on Blog Tour for ECSTASY, April 10-May 18!
Profile Image for Michaela.
75 reviews35 followers
March 11, 2018
---- Disclosure: I received this book for free from 欧宝娱乐. ----

Well, the cover isn't bad, & the prelude was good. Struggled to get through the 1st chapter. Unconsciously started hard skimming the thing somewhere after the middle of the 2nd chapter, & gave up during the 3rd chapter. I set it down after the 1st chapter hoping it would be better when I came back to it, but obviously that didn't pan out.

I hate the protagonist. The writing was unclear & tedious. I also didn't realize I had opened a wordier version of a Harlequin romance. I've no idea where all those stellar reviews are coming from, but this wasn't anything like the blurb led me to expect. Shame, b/c the women associated w/ the great men were usually great in their own right, but have been left over-looked & uncredited. I'd hoped stories like I thought this was going to be would correct some of that, & maybe some of them will, but unfortunately this book is not one of those stories......especially if I can't even manage to get through the reading of the thing. It's too bad, but this was a fail.

Profile Image for Margarita Garova.
483 reviews252 followers
February 19, 2022
鈥溞溠娦缎笛傂� 芯锌褉械写械谢褟褌 锌褉邪胁懈谢邪褌邪, 邪 薪懈械 谐懈 薪邪褉褍褕邪胁邪屑械, 蟹邪 写邪 薪械 锌芯谢褍写械械屑鈥�.

袗谢屑邪, 锌芯 斜邪褖邪 楔懈薪写谢械褉, 锌芯 屑褗卸 袦邪谢械褉, 锌芯 褋褗锌褉褍谐 薪芯屑械褉 写胁械 袚褉芯锌懈褍褋, 邪 褋 薪芯屑械褉 褌褉懈 懈 袙械褉褎械谢. 袦褍蟹邪褌邪 薪邪 胁懈械薪褋泻懈褟 邪褉褌懈褋褌懈褔械薪 械谢懈褌, 锌谢械薪懈褌械谢薪邪 懈 蟹邪谐邪写褗褔薪邪 泻邪褌芯 芯褌 泻邪褉褌懈薪邪 薪邪 袣谢懈屑褌 (褋褗褖芯 薪械懈薪 锌芯泻谢芯薪薪懈泻), 袗谢屑邪 械 褋懈谢薪芯 褌胁芯褉褔械褋泻邪, 褖械 褉械褔械 褋谢芯卸薪邪, 薪邪褌褍褉邪, 泻芯褟褌芯 褋褗斜懈褉邪 胁 褋械斜械 褋懈 锌褉芯褌懈胁芯褉械褔懈褟褌邪 芯褌 谐褉邪薪懈褑邪褌邪 屑械卸写褍 写胁械 械锌芯褏懈. 鈥溞曅貉佈傂靶封€� 械 锌褉懈褟褌薪邪 懈 薪械薪邪褌褉邪锌褔懈胁邪 泻薪懈谐邪, 泻芯褟褌芯 写懈褉械泻褌薪芯 锌芯胁写懈谐邪 蟹邪胁械褋邪褌邪 泻褗屑 谢懈褔薪懈褟 褋胁褟褌 薪邪 褌邪蟹懈 蟹邪斜械谢械卸懈褌械谢薪邪 卸械薪邪.

袧邪泻褗写褉械薪懈褟褌 褋械褑械褋懈芯薪 泻邪褌芯 写芯屑懈薪懈褉邪褖邪 械褋褌械褌懈泻邪 写芯 袩褗褉胁邪褌邪 褋胁械褌芯胁薪邪 胁芯泄薪邪 懈蟹写懈谐邪 械褋薪邪褎褋泻邪 袙懈械薪邪 写芯 泻褍谢褌褍褉械薪 褑械薪褌褗褉 懈 邪褉褌懈褋褌懈褔械薪 械褌邪谢芯薪 胁 袝胁褉芯锌邪. 孝芯胁邪 械 谐褉邪写褗褌, 胁 泻芯泄褌芯 褋械 锌芯写胁懈蟹邪胁邪褌 邪褉褌懈褋褌懈 芯褌 胁褋懈褔泻懈 泻褉邪懈褖邪 薪邪 啸邪斜褋斜褍褉谐褋泻邪褌邪 懈屑锌械褉懈褟 鈥� 泻芯褋屑芯锌芯谢懈褌械薪, 薪芯 屑邪谢褗泻 懈 褍褞褌械薪 械写薪芯胁褉械屑械薪薪芯. 袩械褉懈芯写, 胁 泻芯泄褌芯 屑芯卸械 斜懈 蟹邪 锌褗褉胁懈 懈 蟹邪 锌芯褋谢械写械薪 锌褗褌, 袙懈械薪邪 鈥溞感夹� 蟹薪邪褔械薪懈械鈥�.

袧芯 邪泻芯 胁 懈蟹泻褍褋褌胁邪褌邪 袙懈械薪邪 懈蟹锌褗泻胁邪 褋 屑芯写械褉薪芯褋褌, 褋褗褖芯褌芯 薪械 屑芯卸械 写邪 褋械 泻邪卸械 蟹邪 芯斜褖械褋褌胁械薪懈褌械 薪褉邪胁懈 鈥� 屑邪泻褋懈屑邪谢薪芯褌芯, 薪邪 泻芯械褌芯 械写薪邪 褌邪谢邪薪褌谢懈胁邪 懈 邪屑斜懈褑懈芯蟹薪邪 卸械薪邪 褋 邪褉褌懈褋褌懈褔薪懈 邪褋锌懈褉邪褑懈懈 屑芯卸械 写邪 褋械 薪邪写褟胁邪, 械 褋褗屑薪懈褌械谢薪邪褌邪 芯褌 屑芯褉邪谢薪邪 谐谢械写薪邪 褌芯褔泻邪 褌懈褌谢邪 鈥溞佳冃沸扳€� 薪邪 薪褟泻芯泄 锌褉芯褔褍褌 褏褍写芯卸薪懈泻, 泻芯屑锌芯蟹懈褌芯褉 懈谢懈 锌懈褋邪褌械谢. 袟邪 薪械芯屑褗卸械薪懈褌械 懈 锌芯褋胁械褌懈谢懈 褋械 薪邪 锌褉芯褎械褋懈褟褌邪 褋懈 卸械薪懈 械 蟹邪锌邪蟹械薪芯 褋锌械褑懈邪谢薪芯 屑褟褋褌芯 薪邪 泻褍褕械褌泻邪褌邪 薪邪 写芯泻褌芯褉 肖褉芯泄写. 袪邪蟹斜懈褉邪械屑芯, 褌械 薪械 屑芯谐邪褌 写邪 斜褗写邪褌 写褉褍谐懈, 芯褋胁械薪 鈥溠傃€械褌懈 锌芯谢鈥�, 薪械蟹邪写芯胁芯谢械薪懈 懈 懈褋褌械褉懈褔泻懈, 薪械懈蟹锌褗谢薪懈谢懈 褋胁芯械褌芯 懈蟹泻芯薪薪芯 卸械薪褋泻芯 锌褉械写薪邪蟹薪邪褔械薪懈械.

袝褌芯 蟹邪褖芯 泻芯谐邪褌芯 袗谢屑邪 褋褉械褖邪 20 谐芯写懈薪懈 锌芯-胁褗蟹褉邪褋褌薪懈褟 芯褌 薪械褟 懈 胁械褔械 锌褉芯褔褍褌 泻芯屑锌芯蟹懈褌芯褉 懈 写懈褉懈谐械薪褌 袚褍褋褌邪胁 袦邪谢械褉, 泻芯泄褌芯 褋谢械写 褕械屑械褌薪芯 械写薪芯褋械写屑懈褔薪芯 褍邪卸胁邪薪械 褟 锌褉械胁褉褗褖邪 胁 鈥溞承狙佇啃拘缎� 袦邪谢械褉鈥�, 褌褟 锌褉懈械屑邪 懈蟹褑褟谢芯, 屑邪泻邪褉 懈 褋褗褋 褋褗锌褉芯褌懈胁邪, 泻芯褟褌芯 褌邪泻邪 懈 薪械 褟 薪邪锌褍褋泻邪 写芯泻褉邪褟, 薪械谐芯胁懈褌械 褍褋谢芯胁懈褟 - 写邪 褋械 芯褌泻邪卸械 芯褌 芯锌懈褌懈褌械 褋懈 写邪 泻芯屑锌芯蟹懈褉邪, 蟹邪 写邪 屑芯卸械 写邪 屑褍 褋械 锌芯褋胁械褌懈 胁褋械褑褟谢芯, 薪邪泻褉邪褌泻芯 鈥� 写邪 锌褉械褋褌邪薪械 写邪 斜褗写械 谢懈褔薪芯褋褌. 袨褌 锌械褉褋锌械泻褌懈胁邪褌邪 薪邪 写薪械褕薪懈褟 写械薪 褋屑械 薪邪褟褋薪芯, 褔械 锌芯写芯斜薪懈 褍谐芯胁芯褉泻懈 褉褟写泻芯 蟹邪胁褗褉褕胁邪褌 写芯斜褉械. 袣褗屑 泻褉邪褟 薪邪 泻褉邪褌泻懈褟 褋懈 卸懈胁芯褌 袦邪谢械褉 褍褋锌褟胁邪 写邪 褋械 芯褌褗褉褋懈 芯褌 芯褋褌邪褉械谢懈褌械 褋懈 褉邪蟹斜懈褉邪薪懈褟 懈 写邪 胁懈写懈 胁 卸械薪邪 褋懈 薪械褖芯 锌芯胁械褔械 芯褌 褋褟薪泻邪, 泻芯褟褌芯 褉邪卸写邪 写械褑邪 懈 锌褉械锌懈褋胁邪 锌邪褉褌懈褌褍褉懈. 袟邪 褌芯胁邪 懈蟹懈谐褉邪胁邪 褉芯谢褟 懈 褋斜谢褗褋泻褗褌 褋 袧芯胁懈褟 褋胁褟褌, 薪邪 褔懈泄褌芯 褎芯薪 泻芯屑锌芯蟹懈褌芯褉褗褌 懈蟹锌褗泻胁邪 薪械谢械锌芯, 泻邪泻褌芯 锌芯写芯斜邪胁邪 薪邪 褔芯胁械泻 芯褌 胁械褔械 芯褌屑懈薪邪谢邪 械锌芯褏邪.

小褗褖械褋褌胁褍胁邪褌 写芯褋褌邪褌褗褔薪芯 斜懈芯谐褉邪褎懈褔薪懈 写邪薪薪懈, 褔械 袦邪谢械褉 械 芯斜懈褔邪谢 屑薪芯谐芯 卸械薪邪 褋懈, 褌邪泻邪, 泻邪泻褌芯 褌芯泄 谐芯 械 褉邪蟹斜懈褉邪谢 懈 屑芯谐褗谢 锌褉懈 褑械谢懈褟 褋懈 褌胁芯褉褔械褋泻懈 械谐芯褑械薪褌褉懈蟹褗屑. 袦芯卸械 斜懈 薪械谐芯胁邪褌邪 屑谢邪写邪 懈 褏褍斜邪胁邪 褋褗锌褉褍谐邪 褋褗褖芯 械 懈蟹胁谢懈褔邪谢邪 褔懈褋褌芯 褔芯胁械褕泻邪 褋褍械褌邪 懈 褋芯褑懈邪谢械薪 锌褉械褋褌懈卸 芯褌 褎邪泻褌邪, 褔械 械 褋锌褗褌薪懈褑邪 薪邪 胁械谢懈泻 屑褗卸. 袧芯 20 谐芯写懈薪懈 褋褗锌褉褍卸械褋泻邪 褉邪蟹谢懈泻邪 胁 锌褉械谢芯屑薪懈 胁褉械屑械薪邪 芯蟹薪邪褔邪胁邪 卸械薪懈褌斜邪 薪邪 写胁邪 褋胁褟褌邪 鈥� 褋褌邪褉 懈 薪芯胁, 褋 胁褋懈褔泻懈 褌械卸泻懈 褋斜谢褗褋褗褑懈, 泻芯懈褌芯 锌褉芯懈蟹褌懈褔邪褌 芯褌 褌芯蟹懈 褎邪泻褌. 鈥溞曅貉佈傂靶封€� 械 蟹邪 写褉邪屑邪褌邪 薪邪 褌邪蟹懈 胁褉褗蟹泻邪, 锌褉械写邪写械薪邪 懈蟹褑褟谢芯 锌褉械蟹 芯褔懈褌械 薪邪 褋褗锌褉褍谐邪褌邪, 懈 胁褗锌褉械泻懈 褔械 卸懈褌械泄褋泻邪褌邪 斜懈芯谐褉邪褎懈褟 薪邪 袗谢屑邪 锌褉芯写褗谢卸邪胁邪 芯褖械 50 谐芯写懈薪懈 褋谢械写 褋屑褗褉褌褌邪 薪邪 袚褍褋褌邪胁, 泻薪懈谐邪褌邪 锌褉懈泻谢褞褔胁邪 懈屑械薪薪芯 褋 薪械泄薪芯褌芯 芯胁写芯胁褟胁邪薪械. 袧械泄薪邪褌邪 谢懈褔薪芯褋褌薪邪 懈 褌胁芯褉褔械褋泻邪 械屑邪薪褑懈锌邪褑懈褟 械 胁械褔械 蟹邪胁褗褉褕械薪邪. 袗谢屑邪 锌褉芯写褗谢卸邪胁邪, 褌芯蟹懈 锌褗褌 斜械蟹 褋邪屑芯懈蟹胁懈薪械薪懈褟, 写邪 胁写褗褏薪芯胁褟胁邪 写褉褍谐懈 胁械谢懈泻懈 屑褗卸械, 斜械蟹 写邪 褋械 锌褉懈薪邪褋褟 胁 卸械褉褌胁邪 懈 斜械蟹 写邪 谐褍斜懈 褋械斜械 褋懈.

Profile Image for Ringa Sruogien臈.
624 reviews132 followers
November 23, 2018
Nebuvo jau taip blogai, bet kai matai vienod膮 tuo pat metu skaityt懦 "Esekso slibino" ir "Ekstaz臈s" goodreads reiting膮, tai kyla noras j寞 pakoreguoti.
Sausa, plok拧膷ia, pseudoekstaz臈, isterija, narcisizmas, i拧lepinimas, susigalvoti i拧gyvenimai, 寞sikalb臈tas talentas, bandymas bet kokiomis aplinkyb臈mis prisiplakti prie svetimo talento ir i拧 to kylanti kan膷ia.
Akira膷io prapl臈timui - gerai. Gustavas Maleris, Gustavas Klimtas, kt. O ar ten tikrai taip viskas buvo, tai 膷ia jau klausimas.
802 reviews389 followers
May 10, 2018
Author Mary Sharratt has a mission: " Writing women back into history." In 2012 she focused on 12th-century Benedictine abbess Hildegard of Bingen in ILLUMINATIONS, showing us a woman expected from a young age to submit herself quietly to God but who refused to lose her identity completely and was a composer, herbalist, mathematician and feminist of her times. In 2016 I read THE DARK LADY'S MASK about Aemilia Bassano Lanier, writer and poet, believed to be William Shakespeare's love and an unrecognized collaborator on several of his plays.

Now Sharratt has turned her attention to early-1900s Vienna and Alma Schindler, daughter of famous artist Emil Schindler. Alma is beautiful and musically talented. Men are drawn to her. She received her first kiss from Gustav Klimt. Max Burckhard, Joseph Olbrech, Felix Muhr and others flirted with her, some may have proposed marriage. Alexander von Zemlinsky was one of her musical mentors and her first serious love, whom she might have married if not for two reasons: (1) He was too poor to please her mother, and (2) She met more famous Gustav Mahler and was overwhelmed by him.

So somewhat star-struck, Alma chose to marry Mahler, even knowing that he, unlike Zemlinsky, who encouraged her talent, would expect her to have only one profession after marriage: "...to make me happy...You must surrender yourself to me unconditionally." And she does. But from then on we watch Alma suffer and lament her choices. Sharratt has done extensive research to write this story of Alma's unsatisfying, artistically-suppressed life with Mahler. Not only using information from biographies, she has also mined the words of the two main characters themselves in Gustav Mahler's LETTERS TO HIS WIFE and Alma's 1940 memoir, GUSTAV MAHLER: MEMORIES AND LETTERS, in particular.

Using all this research, Sharratt has painted an extremely detailed picture of 1900s Vienna and the world of music and the arts. This makes for an interesting read. What doesn't work for me is the tediousness of having to listen to Alma's laments and complaints over and over, time after time. We are supposed to believe that her dissatisfaction is the result of unfulfilled dreams of artistic growth and professional recognition. And, yes, there was the legitimate complaint that Mahler did not take her talents seriously, but the whinging woe-is-me attitude that came across in this book was more a "boo-hoo, he doesn't really love me enough or appreciate me and all I do for him."

And he didn't. He was an egotistical, self-absorbed man. When he ignored Alma, she was unhappy and looked for attention elsewhere. When he noticed her, she wasn't and didn't. This felt not so much like artistic dissatisfaction as personal love life dissatisfaction as presented in Sharratt's story.

This book basically ends with the death of Mahler, followed by a very few pages sketching her later life and artistic endeavors. Mahler died in 1911. Alma died in 1964. I would have enjoyed reading more extensively about Alma's years when she was no longer living in Mahler's shadow, the time when she seemed to come into her own. As it is, this book dwells so long on the Alma-Mahler relationship that it often felt more like a melodramatic romance novel than historical biographical fiction.
Profile Image for Kris Waldherr.
Author听50 books367 followers
June 4, 2017
Read an advance copy of this and loved it. I've been fascinated with Alma Mahler every since I first learned of her life years ago鈥擡CSTASY captures the romantic intensity of Alma's life. Bittersweet and compelling. More to come closer to publication.
Profile Image for Olivia-Savannah.
1,053 reviews571 followers
August 20, 2018
I saw Stephanie @ Bookfever鈥檚 book review of this one, and knew I had to read it for myself as well! It didn鈥檛 hurt that this book had such a beautiful cover (many thanks to the publisher for the gorgeous hardcover!) and that it is a historical fiction about a historical figure I hadn鈥檛 heard anything about before. Learning through reading is one of my favourite things to do.

Alma, the main character, has a very strong female voice. I would really say that feminism is one important theme in this book, but not in that it practices it all the time. But because everything that happens makes you see why feminism is important, and makes you question whether or not Alma has made the right choice in every situation she faces. Alma herself, seems to have very feminist thoughts which could be determined as unusual or unrealistic for her time. However, the author has clearly done her research because she quotes sections of Alma鈥檚 real diary which back up her fictional actions as well. You can see how Alma鈥檚 feminist streak is also fuelled by the hopefully Renaissance period that she is in.


Alma does a lot of traveling in this book and I liked that it felt like we went everywhere with her. She travels quite a bit within Europe, to Austria and Venice and other places too. But it was when she travelled to America that I felt the distinct shift in mood, setting and atmosphere to go with it. I loved that transformation and getting to hear about what she thought of such a different culture and way of life to the one she grew up in.

Alma is a composer and adores music, much like her husband as well. I love my music and am always listening to something, including classical music from time to time. I don鈥檛 know much of anything about composing, but it didn鈥檛 distance me from the reading experience at all. Her love for art and her passion about what she loves to do jumped out of the pages to me. I also see reading and writing as my own form of art, and I loved that she inspired me to do what I love even more. I was so engrossed in the art, music and composing even though I鈥檓 not usually into those things! I ended up listening to the operas she mentions in the book while reading to deepen my experience. I recommend you do the same.


The book gets right down to the business of romance with her first affair. The first love story comes hard and fast, but that more so has to do with the fact that we are meeting a young, underdeveloped Alma. She transforms a lot in the novel and her relationships deepen. So, if you are put off by the first love story, hold out. As she becomes more mature, the love stories improve too.

There were a lot of themes in this one. I feel like the themes of motherhood and the difficulties of being a mother, grief, being a wife but also being an individual, feminism and responsibility were all really well developed and discussed. I felt like the theme of depression was brushed over at first, but then comes back later on in the novel and gets more depth too. In fact, the themes and its character driven nature make me compare this one to Circe by Madeline Miller, except it鈥檚 not a mythology retelling but it鈥檚 a historical fiction.


It also made me think about adultery in a way I never had done so before. I don鈥檛 even know what I think about Alma and Gustav Mahler as a couple really. Their relationship was so toxic but at the same time there is clearly love there鈥� I鈥檓 not sure what to think. You know this is one thought provoking novel for sure! I can鈥檛 wait to read more of Mary Sharratt鈥檚 work.

Relevance to today: I think this novel is a good one for showing how motherhood and being a wife is not easy and comes with its own sacrifices and troubles which can make it very hard on the woman who feels responsible for her family. I also think it really showed an interesting relationship. It was so twisted that I don鈥檛 even know what to make of it. One worth reading to make up your own mind about it and to learn about Alma Mahler.

This review and others can be found on Olivia's Catastrophe:
Profile Image for Patty.
1,210 reviews43 followers
April 10, 2018
I jumped on reading this book because of the author before I knew anything at all about the book. I鈥檝e read several of Ms. Sharratt鈥檚 books and enjoyed them so I was excited at the prospect of a new one. When it arrived and I read the synopsis I was intrigued. I will admit to knowing nothing about Alma Schindler Mahler and very little about her husband, Gustav. So I will admit that I did some googling and I listened to both of their compositions while I read the book. I felt that was appropriate background music.

This IS Alma鈥檚 story but Gustav plays an out sized role in her life an in the novel. He almost sucks the life out of her. I have to admit that he really annoyed me 鈥� but I suppose anyone with a great talent will be temperamental and a bit crazed at given times. Add that to the way women were treated at this period in time and it鈥檚 a recipe for a talented woman to lose herself in doing the expected. For that is what Alma fought against; she was a woman with many passions and her personality did not fit the model for the perfect little woman of her day. She felt she had two paths; marry and have children or be a spinster, pursue her music and be one of the dreaded 鈥渢hird sex.鈥� A woman who is trying to be a man.

Alma was a great beauty in her day and she had no dearth of suitors but she wanted love and passion. Her mother who lived a less than secure life wanted security for her even at the cost of love. Alma, at least in this tale seemed to fall in love with any man that was totally unsuitable for her. Even Mahler while acceptable was not financially stable.

Ms. Sharratt develops her Alma in a way you would expect a sheltered teenager to behave. The character is a mass of contradictions and at times very unlikable. But she is a strong woman who believes in her talent until told by a man that she doesn鈥檛 have any. Like so many women before her and after her she learns her own self and comes out stronger for it. Whether she comes out wiser. well you will have to decide.

The book is a delight to read, full of passion and pain, love, hate and joy. Ms. Sharratt brings Vienna from the turn of the 20th century alive. The good and the bad. I read the book over the course of a day. It grabbed me and just wouldn鈥檛 let me go. I also learned that I enjoy Gustav Mahler鈥檚 music very much.

4.5
Profile Image for Linda Zagon.
1,615 reviews192 followers
March 23, 2018
My Review of 鈥淓cstasy鈥� by Mary Sharratt

I loved everything about the Historical Fiction novel 鈥淓cstasy鈥� by Mary Sharratt. The timeline for this story is the turn of the century, when the various forms of the arts show changes. The story goes to the past and to the future when it pertains to the characters or events. The story takes place in Vienna, Austria, Europe, and and New York

Mary Sharratt describes her characters as complicated and complex. Many are talented and artistic in many ways. This is a time where passion can be seen in art, music, theater, opera and dance. There are a few courageous and brave women that are able to break through in the male dominated arts.

Alma Schindler has been brought up in a talented household. Her father was a famous painter, her stepfather is also an artist, and her mother was an opera singer. From an early childhood, Alma has played the piano. Her passion for composing music shows as she enters young adulthood. Alma turns many heads when she goes to the Opera house. Unfortunately, it is a time where a young woman is supposed to get married and have responsibilities with her family. Alma wants so much more. She wants to learn more about rhythm, counterpoint and wants to compose an opera.

Although Alma wants to compose, she also wants to love and be loved. How can Alma share her compassion for anything but music? Alma is impressed by Gustav Mahler, and soon becomes his wife. Gustav Mahler has made it clear, there is no place for Alma鈥檚 composing in their life together.

I appreciate the way that the author describes the feminist spirit in her writing. She also writes about the balance of being a wife, mother, sister, daughter, and a composer. I would recommend this story for readers of Historical Fiction. I received an ARC for my honest review.
Profile Image for Christie Sitterly.
259 reviews12 followers
August 14, 2018
Mary Sharratt鈥檚 Ecstasy is a compelling novel that immediately entrances the reader into the life of Alma Schindler. Alma is a talented fledgling composer in Vienna in the early 1900鈥檚. Her parents wish to marry her off to a man that meets their standards while Alma searches for a passionate love in the music world. She meets Gustav Mahler, a well-known composer and they have a whirlwind romance. However, he requires that she give up all aspirations of becoming a published composer. The book details Alma鈥檚 continuous struggles with love, ambition, and life鈥檚 heartbreaks. I struggle to offer a comparison to this book as it was a one of a kind jewel!
Profile Image for Adrienne McDonnell.
Author听1 book32 followers
November 13, 2017
It's hard to imagine a more glorious subject for a biographical novel than the passionate and spirited composer Alma Mahler. Since receiving an Advanced Reader Copy, I've been engrossed and mesmerized by Alma's story, reading it in the wee hours of the night. What a character, what a life, and what a book Mary Sharratt has created!
Profile Image for Natasa.
1,372 reviews3 followers
February 7, 2020
听This book did not do justice to Alma as portraying her as a female composer in a man鈥檚 world. Rather, it pays more attention to Alma鈥檚 love life than her accomplishments. I thought most of the characters were flat and lacking in depth. Despite these flaws, the novel was very well-written and heavily researched.
Profile Image for Julianne Douglas.
44 reviews18 followers
May 10, 2018
Seeking to supplement a famous man's public persona with intimate detail, authors of historical fiction often choose the man's wife to narrate his story. It's not often that the woman herself has the potential to rival her husband's brilliance, but such is the situation Mary Sharratt explores in her latest novel, ECSTASY (HMHBooks, April 2018). Written from the close third-person perspective of Alma Schindler Mahler, wife of composer Gustav Mahler and a gifted composer in her own right, ECSTASY examines Alma's difficult position in turn-of-the-twentienth-century Vienna. In an era and locale where women were still expected to surrender their own aspirations to the duties of marriage and motherhood, Alma suffers tremendous anguish as she attempts to reconcile her musical ambitions with her awe of her husband's genius.

The novel covers the years 1899 to 1911, from Alma's nineteenth summer through the year of Mahler's death. Though Alma would outlive her husband by half a century to lead a colorful, liberated existence in Austria and New York, it is the years she spends in Mahler's shadow that determine the future course of her life. Daughter of a noted painter, Albert Schindler, and stepdaughter of Carl Moll, one of the founding artists of the Vienna Secession, Alma grows up surrounded by artists and intellectuals. Encouraged by her parents, she studies piano and composition and has composed a series of lieder for piano and voice by the time she meets Mahler in 1901. After a whirlwind courtship, she marries the much-older conductor in 1902, only to abandon her studies when Mahler insists there be only one composer in the family. The bulk of the novel details Alma's struggle to subjugate her ambition and desires to the dictates of her husband's artistic life and marital expectations. The demands of motherhood, tragedy, and her husband's work schedule and frequent touring sap Alma of her mental and physical strength until she finds herself at the brink of a breakdown. Only then, having lost her grip on her true self, does she find the courage to engage in behavior that forces Mahler to reevaluate their relationship and the validity of his wife's talent and dreams.

Sharratt faces a difficult task in capturing the essence of this contradictory woman, by turns meek and courageous, passive and pioneering. A fundamental ambivalence defines Alma: she relishes her role as helpmate and muse, facilitator of her husband's genius, even as she increasingly resents how catering to his needs forces her to deny her own. At times, this ambivalence renders her frustratingly submissive; at others, she commits rash, impulsive actions that almost defy explanation. The thread that binds Alma's warring selves together, that creates a whole from contradictory parts, is ecstasy: the ecstasy she experiences listening to her husband's glorious music crash over the concert hall; the elation she finds in furtive composing and amorous dalliance; the rapture she and Mahler share at intimate moments of their difficult but enduring relationship. Just as Mahler incorporates cowbells and hammerblows into symphonies of voice and instrument, to stunning effect, Sharratt probes the limitations and frustrations of Alma's marriage in order to better celebrate the ecstasy of life lived in unbounded appreciation of creative beauty.

Luscious in language and beautiful in execution, ECSTASY is a novel to savor. Though the belle 茅poque world it evokes in brilliant detail might be distant in time, the challenge Alma faces--that of extracting her self from the confines of duty and expectation to relish the fullness of life--is one that women continue to face today. Alma Schindler Mahler--muse, mother, and musician--can help them triumph.
Profile Image for Amina Hujdur.
734 reviews34 followers
December 27, 2021
Roman zasnovan na historijskim 膷injenicama o poznatoj austrijskoj kompozitorici Almi 艩indler. Jako lijep prikaz 啪ene koja se bori za emancipaciju u svijetu mu拧karaca.
Profile Image for Meg - A Bookish Affair.
2,484 reviews211 followers
April 30, 2018
"Ecstasy" is the story of Alma who has played muse to many men that you may have heard of: Walter Gropius, Gustav Klimt, Gustav Mahler, among others. Although her story has often been in the liner notes of the lives of these great creators, Alma was fascinating in her own right as the author shows. This is a fascinating story that sucked me in!

You may have heard me say this before but one of the things that I like about historical fiction the most is that it often looks at people and their lives that you wouldn't find in a history book. For so much of our past, what makes it into the history books has been largely limited to what men do, specifically white men. I think we are beginning to fix this (very, very slowly) but we are getting better at representing others in history. There is a lot of historical fiction that has the power to keep pushing us that way, including this book. Even though Alma played a role in history, I had never heard of her before. I'm glad this book changed that!

Alma is a fascinating character in her own right! She dreams of being a great composer and although that world had largely been closed off for women but Alma really believes that the world is changing. Unfortunately as she finds, it hasn't changed enough to let her truly fulfill her dreams. I loved how Sharratt wrote her character. She really made her come to life!

I loved the historical detail that the author included! Since I wasn't familiar with Alma, I really appreciated the details of what her world would have been like and what she might have been like. This was great!
Profile Image for 鲍驳苍臈.
637 reviews149 followers
February 11, 2021
Jei j膮 b奴t懦 para拧臋 ir i拧vert臋 tada, kai man buvo 16 met懦, ji ko gero b奴t懦 buvusi viena i拧 t懦 knyg懦, kur patinka, ir gal net labai patinka, ale bi拧k寞 sarmata pasakyt apie tai, kiek patinka. Pana拧iai kaip su paskutinio XX a. de拧imtme膷io meksikie膷i懦 muilo operom - visos mano aplinkos bendraam啪臈s 啪i奴r臈jo, visos band臈m apsimesti, kad labai juokinga ar nieko rimta ten, visos tur臈jom savo m臈gstamus veik臈jus ir scenas, visos jas 啪i奴r臈damos svajojom apie tobul膮 meil臋.

Ir kaip dabar nieko ypatinga nebepamaty膷iau tuose serialuose, taip nieko labai ypatinga nebema膷iau 拧ioje knygoje. Ta膷iau manau, kad ma啪daug 15-18 met懦 merginoms, jei skaitoma kartu su aptarimu, ji gali b奴ti visai gera prad啪ia pagalvoti apie santykius ir savo talentus, pasirinkimus ir kas i拧 j懦 galiausiai i拧eina. O Almos ir Gustavo istorija yra puikus psichologinio smurto pavyzdys, i拧 ties懦 toks puikus, kad prakti拧kai mokymams kaip iliustracij膮 galima naudoti.
Profile Image for Kate Baxter.
685 reviews49 followers
June 25, 2018
Such a tragic, challenging and difficult life was had by Alma Schindler Mahler, wife of famous composer and conductor, Gustav Mahler. She was born into a Viennese bourgeois family. Her father was a renowned landscape painter and her mother, an opera singer. With such artistry in one home, how could Alma avoid her own artistic leanings? She was a bright, stunning young woman, a skilled pianist and an aspiring composer. Her first composition teacher did not encourage her. Her second did but may have had ulterior motives; she wasn't sure. And then there was Gustav Mahler. She was as captivated by him as he was by her. However, he insisted on her giving up her own music, embracing his and calling it theirs. This was the start of their tumultuous marriage. Such squelching of one's spirit cannot be endured forever and ultimately results in unfortunate consequences.

Previous biographies have not looked kindly on Alma Mahler. She was a modern woman brought into a less modern world at the tail end of the 19th century. Author Mary Sharratt offers the reader a fictional account with a more human approach to the complex person of Alma Mahler. It is based on fact through Sharratt's extensive research. Ms. Sharratt presents a young Alma eager to please her mature and older husband. She lives for him and yearns for his approval. Why wouldn't she; she's only 20? As her eyes were opened, his were not and therein lies the rub.

This was a beautifully written account of the Mahlers' lives, mostly through Alma's perspective. The prose is elegant and one is thoroughly transported to a different time and place. The story was truly an emotional roller coaster - the highs so high and the lows so very devastating.

As a musician with a fondness for Mahler, I personally was enthralled to read about the historic performances of his famous works, especially the choral pieces which I have had the pleasure to perform.

Thank you Ms. Sharratt for giving voice to a woman of great achievement who could so easily have been lost to the annals of history.

I am grateful to Ms. Sharratt and publisher Houghton Mifflin Co. for having provided a free copy of this book. Their generosity, however, did not influence this review - the words of which are mine alone.

Note: I was rather curious about the dust jacket's artwork. It looked so much like something of Alphonse Mucha (and is often assumed to have been done by him). However, according to various sources on the internet, it is actually the work of Louis Th茅ophile Hingre. (The original artist was not noted in the book's design credits.)
Profile Image for James Martin.
Author听10 books317 followers
September 3, 2018
Mary Sharratt's novelization of Alma Mahler is as rich as many of the characters therein. Alma longs to follow her passion for music but the times and attitudes of most of those around her hold her back. Marrying Gustav Mahler, a leading composer and conductor of the day, complicates her life in dozens of ways, as well. The lavish setting of Vienna with its well-heeled, colorful characters~albeit with myriad flaws in both people and mores of the era~plays out a bit like a film, replete with characters~and music~ we know, like Alma, her husband, and even an early suitor of hers, the artist Gustave Klimt. One can only hope for Alma as she tries to follow her bliss~and cheer for her with each little victory.
211 reviews
February 25, 2018
A fascinating look at the life of Alma Mahler n茅e Schindler, married to Gustav Mahler, Walter Gropius and Franz Werfel, all three creative geniuses. Who was Alma? A daughter, sister, mother, wife, lover, composer, femme fatale, muse? Certainly a complex woman ahead of her time who defied convention to find her own voice.
Profile Image for Penny (Literary Hoarders).
1,262 reviews164 followers
June 22, 2018
This was okay. Alma is written as an overly melodramatic person - constant hand wringing about wishing she were a man so she could enjoy everything that men are allowed. Overwrought as well about her feelings of passion she wanted to act upon, again wishing she were a man to do so. So it was an okay story, it's writing was too "overly" done for the most part - if that is making any sense.
Profile Image for 贰尘颈濒臈.
325 reviews43 followers
June 1, 2019
I really enjoyed the book as a light and easy read, however it didn't seem special to me in any way. Yet I do believe that if you go into the book with some prior knowledge or interest in Alma Maria Mahler Gropius Werfel, any other big names in the book or music history in general - you would certainly be able to get way more out of this book than I have.
Profile Image for Stephanie (Bookfever).
1,075 reviews192 followers
April 12, 2018
Oh, to sense the heights. To be a mountain. To be great and expansive, bursting with potentiality.

I signed up for the blog tour of Ecstasy because the synopsis sounded incredible and right up my alley. In the last year I've become really intrigued with books set in the early 20th century, especially if the setting is in Vienna and if the story revolves around a real woman in history like Alma. She definitely wasn't a perfect character. She had her flaws and problems but even so I hadn't expected to fall in love with this brilliant book the way I did. I even read until 2:00 pm to finish the story just because I didn't want to put the book down and stop reading.

The story is about Alma Schindler (later Alma Mahler), who more than anything wants to be a sucessful composer. When she meets the nearly twenty years older and accomplished composer Gustav Mahler, they fall for each other. But for their marriage his condition is that she gives up her music so that there's more room for his own, essentially. This causes Alma to be utterly torn between her passion for composing and her love for Gustav.

I can't quite put my finger on what exactly made this book so good. Vienna at the turn of the 20th century, the complex character of Alma, the artistic men she came in contact with and who all seemed to be enchanted by her, the bittersweet element of the story, the writing... I just loved it all.

It also doesn't happen often but I ended this book with tears in my eyes. This just shows how totally taken I was with it. I'm so glad the author put the spotlight on Alma Mahler the way she did in this amazing story. I want more people to also read this book and hopefully also fall in love with it the way I did.

Ecstasy by Mary Sharratt was one amazing and beautifully written story. I honestly fell in love with it from the very first page and continued being completely hooked throughout the whole novel. It was just phenomenal!
Profile Image for Jill Meyer.
1,186 reviews119 followers
April 8, 2018
How many people reading this review of Mary Sharratt's novel, "Ecstasy". remember the work of a singer-songwriter popular in the 1960's named Tom Leher? He wrote satirical songs about famous people and events, one of whom was a Viennese temptress named Alma Schindler Mahler Gropius Werfel. His song about ASMGW became one of his best known because the woman behind the song led such an interesting life - full of music, art, and writing...and sex. Now Mary Sharratt's novel dishes on Alma-of-the-many-names-and-husbands.

Sharratt's novel covers Alma's full life, from her beginning as a young Viennese woman - considered local talent by the local swains - to her death in 1964 at the age of 85 in New York City. She was associated either as a wife or lover of many of the most important men in Central Europe.(I think that line is from the Leher song; I can't get it out of my mind). Sharratt does a good job at telling of Alma's life with a great amount of romantic language that can only be used in a work of fiction. I might have enjoyed it a bit better had the book been written as non-fiction but then maybe a woman like Alma NEEDS flowery prose to describe her. In any case, Sharratt's book is quite enjoyable.
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