About This Book
The story follows a working-class miner who abruptly leaves his home and job to pursue music and personal freedom. Traveling from a coal town into urban and continental artistic circles, he seeks self-realization as a musician while forming romantic liaisons and friendships with painters, writers, and patrons. Encounters with political debates and social expectations reveal tensions between creative impulse, sexual desire, and class obligations. The flute functions as a symbolic instrument for identity and authority, and the narrative examines postwar disillusionment, the costs of autonomy, and the struggle to reconcile passion with responsibility.
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