An OK biography of an interesting composer, though marred by a loose, gossipy tone and at least a few factual errors. Servadio marshals available evidence about Rossini's life, from his impoverished childhood to the astonishing productivity of his early career, to his shocking decision to largely stop composing at the height of his powers. Along the way she explores sensitive topics like Rossini's lifelong battle with depression, and his transition from a youthful liberal to a notable conservative-cum-reactionary who palled around with Metternich and Napoleon III. (In one striking moment, Rossini is meeting with Italian friends after the failure of the 1848 Revolutions in Italy when an official from occupying Austria pays his respects. All the Italians immediately turn their backs and leave the room, a silent treatment that was common for Austrians in that tense period. Rossini, one of the greatest living Italians, was upset — at his friends, whose departure he took as a personal affront.)
I do think this book could have done with slightly more in-depth analysis of Rossini's music — some of his monumental works came and went in little more than a paragraph. Servadio was at her best covering Rossini's social and psychological life, and at her weakest relating him to the big events going on in Europe at the time (some of which she mis-characterizes).