The Magic Strings of Frankie Presto by Mitch Albom
Reviewed by Gerti
I’m
already a huge fan of Mitch Albom, so it was no surprise to me that I
enjoyed his latest offering, “The Magic Strings of Frankie Presto.”
The novel tells the heart-breaking story of a young boy born in Spain
under the most trying of circumstances – his mother being killed
during the Spanish Civil War. A young woman spirits him away from the
burning church where he was born, but eventually tosses him in a
river when he won’t stop crying.
With
such an inauspicious start, you’d imagine that Francisco (Frankie)
would not have had a very good life. And yet this boy has been
blessed by the spirit of Music itself, and so many magical things
happen to him, including being rescued (from the river, at least) by
a hairless dog, and then raised by a wife-less man. Yes, many details
from this magical life are implausible, but that doesn’t make them
any less dramatic.
Frankie’s
early affinity for music is so strong, that his adoptive father,
Baffa Rubio, the man who owns the local sardine factory, takes him to
a blind guitar player so the boy can learn to play. The two, Frankie
and El Maestro, form a very close bond, so close, that when the boy’s
adoptive father is falsely imprisoned during the Franco regime, El
Maestro helps the boy recover, and eventually, enables him to flee
the country.
The
book is filled with heroes and villians, all of them interesting, and
all of whom shape Frankie just as he impacts them. Like Forrest Gump,
there are cameos here from some of musics greatest names: Duke
Ellington, Tony Bennett, Lyle Lovett, and KISS, to name just a few.
Frankie is at Woodstock, Frankie appears on the Tonight Show, Frankie
lives a life as a successful musician despite his childhood traumas,
but drugs and alcohol get to him, as it has to so many famous people.
Eventually,
Frankie and the love of his life Aurora, find a little girl of their
own to adopt, and she becomes Frankie’s guiding star when all else
fails him. He drops out of the limelight and starts to teach music
himself, not realizing until the end the relationship he and the
Maestro of his youth actually had. Tying it all together are the
magic strings on his guitar, given to his mother by a gypsy family,
which have the power to change lives. Frankie does that several
times, and while I’m not sure this book has the power to change
your life, it is a fabulous tale told brilliantly by one of the most
unique voices in American fiction today. I can’t tell you how many
times I cried while reading this epic (500 pages!) work, but that
just shows how much heart it has, and how invested I was in these
characters. “TMSOFP” will take you on a magical journey, and I
wouldn’t have missed it for the world. I highly recommend it,
although I probably enjoyed Albom’s more famous “Tuesdays with
Morrie” more.