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Finding Handel-bookcover

By: Helen Dymond

Finding Handel

Pages: 232 Ratings: 4.8
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When the sixty-five-year-old Handel’s journey through Holland is interrupted by a road accident, he is nursed back to health by a hermit and a servant girl who both have deeply troubled lives. He embarks on an inner journey, recalling musical triumphs and failures, dreaming of his past loves, facing up to his faults of character and asking himself questions: why has he chosen Britain as his home? Why does he feel compelled to compose his final oratorio, 'Jephtha', in a race against time with his encroaching blindness? 

His London friends realise he is missing and try to find him, led by his number one admirer, the artist Mary Delany, who passionately opposes the oppression of women and celebrates her own sexuality. Handel’s Christian faith is so badly shaken by a quarrel with the freethinking hermit that it threatens to prevent him from completing his life’s work. The novel takes us right away from the usual stereotypes of Handel as a haughty courtier or a comical foreigner, and into the mind of an intensely private and passionate man whose unique musical gifts are enjoyed more widely today than ever before.


Helen Dymond’s fascination with Handel started in the 1980s when she sang in the Handel Opera Chorus. In 1985 she supplied the research for the Channel 4 film Honour, Profit and Pleasure starring Simon Callow; and her “Handel-Lovers’ Chorus”, a comic version of the Hallelujah Chorus, was published and is still in print. In 2005 scenes from her play Handel and Susannah were performed in London, followed by her play Handel’s Feast in 2009. For forty years she was mainly occupied in teaching English and lecturing in Humanities; her final post was at the City Lit, London, teaching on Handel’s Operas and Oratorios and The Psychology of Religion.

Customer Reviews
4.8
12 reviews
12 reviews
  • Franho

    I very much enjoyed this entertaining and informative book. An imaginative story full of colourful characters, from an author with obvious knowledge and understanding of Handel, his music and the times in which he lived.

  • Mr Jean-Gabriel Tarassenko

    This is a fascinating insight into Handel's life and the workings of his inner mind, based on extensive historical and biographical research. The cast of characters is very well written with humour and authenticity. Highly recommended to all those who love a good story!

  • Fiona sandilands

    This is a very unusual and imaginative novel written by an author who has an impressive knowledge of Handel's life and works. Even if a reader had little or no knowledge of this brilliant composer they could not fail to be fascinated by the way Helen Dymond weaves facts and fiction together in a highly colourful and entertaining way. An absorbing read.

  • Catherine Bott

    A fascinating insight into the mind of a great composer
    It's astonishing how very little we know about what made Handel tick - Helen Dymond's novel shines a compassionate light on a baroque genius and tells the compelling story of a seismic event, late in the composer's life, which made him question everything he thought he stood for. "Finding Handel" wears its research lightly and helps us to listen to his final works with new ears. It's a great read for anyone keen to engage more deeply with the man behind the music.
    Catherine Bott, Classic FM

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