> Skip to content
  • Published: 26 August 2011
  • ISBN: 9781869795078
  • Imprint: RHNZ Adult ebooks
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 300

The Conductor




A best-selling, compelling and evocatively realised novel based on real events and figures

A best-selling, compelling and evocatively realised novel based on real events and figures. It has now sold into eight different countries around the world.

In June 1941, Nazi troops march on Leningrad and surround it. Hitler's plan is to shell, bomb, and starve the city into submission. Most of the cultural elite are evacuated early in the siege, but Dmitri Shostakovich, the most famous composer in Russia, stays on to defend his city, digging ditches and fire-watching. At night he composes a new work.

But after Shostakovich and his family are forced to evacuate, only Karl Eliasberg - a shy and difficult man, conductor of the second-rate Radio Orchestra - and an assortment of musicians are left behind in Leningrad to face an unendurable winter and start rehearsing the finished score of Shostakovich's Leningrad Symphony.

  • Published: 26 August 2011
  • ISBN: 9781869795078
  • Imprint: RHNZ Adult ebooks
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 300

About the author

Sarah Quigley

Sarah Quigley was born in Christchurch, New Zealand. She is a novelist, critic, non-fiction writer, poet, and columnist. She has a DPhil in Literature from the University of Oxford and is a graduate of Bill Manhire’s creative writing course. In 1998, she won the Buddle Findlay Sargeson Fellowship. Her short stories and poetry have been widely broadcast and published, and she has won many prizes, including the Sunday Star-Times Short Story Award and the Commonwealth Pacific Rim Short Story Award. Her publications include novels, short fiction, a creative writing manual and poetry collections, many of which have sold internationally.

Reviewing her novel Fifty Days, The Observer wrote, ‘Sensual, monstrous and bewitching . . . Quigley’s prose imparts constant shocks of lyricism, intensity and acuity.’ Her second novel, Shot, was long-listed for the 2005 International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award, and her third novel, Fifty Days, saw her featured in Waterstones UK 20 Faces of the Future.

In 2000 she won the inaugural Creative New Zealand Berlin Residency. Since then she has divided her time between New Zealand and Berlin. Her novel The Conductor, which is set during the siege of Leningrad, was the highest selling adult fiction title in New Zealand in 2011, remaining at number one for 20 weeks. Subsequently it won the Booksellers Choice Award and was long-listed for the 2012 International IMPAC Award and was shortlisted for the Prix Femina in France. More about Quigley’s work can be found on her website: www.sarahvquigley.com.

The New Zealand Herald wrote of The Conductor: ‘This extraordinary novel is a symphony on the power of love — the love of music, home, family, city, and Quigley’s love of writing. Each sentence carries the weight of these loves, but each sentence is characterised by an unexpected moving lightness of being. A triumph on every level …’ A review in The Observer read: ‘The Conductor reads like a proper up-all-night page-turner, but it also conveys the extraordinary life-saving properties of music, and hope.’ The novel was chosen by The Observer as one of its top picks for 2012, and has been sold into 10 different countries.

Also by Sarah Quigley

See all

Praise for The Conductor

This extraordinary novel is a symphony on the power of love — the love of music, home, family, city, and Quigley’s love of writing. Each sentence carries the weight of these loves, but each sentence is characterised by an unexpected moving lightness of being. A triumph on every level.

Paula Green, Canvas Magazine

I felt utterly transported to a place and a time — Leningrad in the grip of winter and the brutal siege that saw its citizens stripped of hope and dignity, eating boiled shoe leather to survive, the life slowly being crushed out of them. It’s powerful material that might have been misused by a more heavy-handed writer but Quigley has a lightness and clarity both in the way she uses words and story.

Nicky Pellegrino, New Zealand Herald

The Conductor reads like a proper, up-all-night page turner, but it also goes deeper than that, conveying the extraordinary life-saving properties of music, and hope.

The Observer

Classical music, wintry Russian, an inhuman siege: with these ingredients Quigley creates her own heroic symphony.

Toronto Star

Superb. An extraordinary period of history brought to life by a daring novelist.

Lloyd Jones, author of Mister Pip

Quigley’s novel, like the story it tells, is a heroic enterprise.

C.K. Stead, author of Mansfield: A Novel and My Name Was Judas.

The Conductor is an amazing achievement.

Stella Duffy, author of State of Happiness and The Room of Lost Things.