This book is an ambitious attempt to separate what is actually known
(and can be known) about Mozart from the many myths and legends that
have grown up about his life, character, and death. It subjects
individual myths to critical and scholarly scrutiny--weighing the
evidence on which it is based, and critically assessing the reliability
of that evidence. The author first considers the question of Mozart's
death in 1791 at the age of 35, a subject that intrigued his
contemporaries and has continued to fascinate posterity. No other aspect
of Mozart's life has engendered so many dramatic and colorful myths. The
stage play and movie Amadeus incorporated virtually all these myths
and, indeed, most of the other myths associated with Mozart. In the
remainder of this book, the author treats in similar fashion other
legends relating to Mozart's alleged maturity, drinking, extravagance,
unreliability, womanizing, and professional failure. There is also much
material on the nature of Mozart's genius, the influence of Freemasonry
on his work, and the value of his last compositions. The book is
illustrated with 8 pages of halftones and line drawings.