"This is a major contribution to our understanding of Toscanini and of several entire eras of late nineteenth- and twentieth-century musical life, especially the almost improvisatory looseness of opera in Italy, the glamour of European festivals, and the concert life of the United States. It's also a wonderful, sometimes downright salacious read."--New York Times
"Toscanini's large, cranky humanity comes alive throughout his letters, as it does in his best recordings."--New York Review of Books
"Edited with scrupulous care and wide-ranging erudition."--Wall Street Journal
"Sachs has served the conductor well . . . by editing this generously annotated and unprecedentedly revealing collection of letters that were written, usually in haste and often in fury, over the course of seventy years."--Washington Post
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