Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Fatal Tango Giveaway



Fatal Tango by Wolfram Fleischhauer

The Story:


Giulietta Battin has devoted herself to ballet, but when she decides to explore a new style of music — the tango — life as she knows it changes forever. She meets Argentinean tango dancer Damián Alsina and they begin a torrid affair …  which quickly turns into a nightmare. Damián sabotages his own performance with a bizarre, improvised choreography. Giulietta follows her lover to South America, where her journey into the world of tango confronts her with the unspeakable horrors of the country’s brutal past. But denial will never silence art, and as Giulietta learns to decipher the true significance of Damián’s dance style, she finds the key to the mystery of her lover´s past and the terrifying truth that connects it with her own.

The Art of Tango:

In real life, tango can also be in code. Fleischhauer interviewed professional dancers in Buenos Aires and asked them to reveal their personal tango notation systems. Most couples have some kind of system to memorize their complex choreographies.

How Tango Can Reveal Secrets:

In the example below, Fleischhauer shows from a dancer’s perspective how tango code might reveal the truth about a romance — will it be a thriller, or just more filler?

The music starts …

Step: Tijera — Scissor: A movement, usually danced by the man, in which an extended leg is withdrawn and crossed in front of the supporting leg without weight so that it remains free for the next step or movement.

Possible Interpretation: “Interesting, he really likes to dance these tijeras. Not the kind of sequence you would expect the first time you are dancing with a stranger, but let’s wait and see where this is all going.”

Step: Enganche — Hooking; coupling; the little hook: Occurs when a partner wraps a leg around the other’s leg, or uses a foot to catch and hold the other’s foot or ankle.

Possible Interpretation: “That enganche is really a little early for my taste. Strange, he does not really strike me as the pushy type at all. I´ve been watching him with other women, obviously, and I know he has been watching me. Is he doing all of this to show off to someone else?”

Step: Adorno — Adornment; embellishment; decoration: Complicated or syncopated movements which the dancer uses to demonstrate their skill and to interpret the music.

Possible Interpretation: “Yes. I better stay on my guard with this guy. All these adornos probably aren´t event meant for me. Is he dancing with me at all? He’s so self-absorbed he probably would not even notice if I did one myself. Let’s see. OK, I was wrong. He did notice. And I can just sense he is going to pick up on it ...”

Step: Desplazamiento — Displacement: Displacing the partner’s leg or foot using one’s own leg or foot.

Possible Interpretation: “I was right. But what is he really trying to say now with this desplazamiento. My guess still is he is just very much in love with himself.”

Step: Ocho Cortado — Cut eight: change of direction. Typical in club-style tango where many such brakes are used to avoid collisions. Describes a movement done on either foot, pivoting forward or backward, and going either left or right.

Possible Interpretation: “Well, maybe not, after all. The way he just looked at me while he was doing these subtle ocho cortados. I must say, that was really exquisite. I wouldn’t mind to dance a whole tanda with him.”

Step: Rabona — A walking step with a syncopated cross. Done forward or backward the dancer steps on a beat, quickly closes the other foot in cruzada, and steps again on the next beat. Adapted from soccer.

Possible Interpretation: “Hmmm, I just love it when the ochos get even more syncopated into rabonas. And he’s only looking at me now. Who is he, anyway? He´s cautious, but confident, and likes to surprise with suggestive little details.”

The music stops. We stand in a tight embrace, maybe a little too tight now, leaning on each other as the cortina jingle sets in.

“Otra vez?” he asks as the cortina fades and tango music sets in again. “Once more?” And then the penny drops: tijeras, enganche, adorno, desplazamiento, ocho cortado, rabono... otra vez? T.e. a.d.o.r.o... I adore you! What a charmer.

We invite you to use the text above in articles related to this novel. To learn more about Fatal Tango, visit Amazon.com.

FATAL TANGO
By Wolfram Fleischhauer


Giulietta Battin has devoted herself to ballet, but when she decides to explore a new style of music -- the tango -- life as she knows it changes forever. She meets Argentinean tango dancer Damián Alsina and they begin a torrid affair, which quickly turns into a nightmare. Damián sabotages his own performance with a bizarre, improvised choreography. Giulietta follows her lover to South America, where her journey into the world of tango confronts her with the unspeakable horrors of the country’s brutal past. But denial will never silence art, and as Giulietta learns to decipher the true significance of Damián’s dance style, she finds the key to the mystery of her lover´s past and the terrifying truth that connects it with her own.

Praise for Fatal Tango

“A new thriller by one of the most interesting contemporary German authors--set in Buenos Aires, Fleischhauer masterfully blends the past and the present into an irresistible novel.” --Journal Frankfurt

“Wolfram Fleischhauer has written a magnificent novel, a highly original mix of love story, dance novel, and political thriller.” --Neues Deutschland newspaper

“A landmark in writing about dance … brilliantly observed … quotable lines everywhere – on dance, music, life, and philosophy.” --Dance Gazette

About Wolfram Fleischhauer

Born in Karlsruhe in 1961, Wolfram Fleischhauer developed a passionate interest in foreign cultures at an early age. As a sixteen-year-old, he enrolled for a year abroad at an American high-school, and later spent time in Spain and France while studying for a degree in Comparative Literature at the Free University of Berlin. He travelled to Southeast Asia and Central America and was awarded a DAAD scholarship, which took him to the mecca of literary theory at UC Irvine. Fleischhauer has written five novels which have sold well over half a million copies in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland.

FATAL TANGO by Wolfram Fleischhauer
AmazonCrossing, 416 pages
ISBN-10: 1611091470; ISBN-13: 978-1611091472
Paperback: $14.95; Digital: $9.99
On-sale: March 13, 2012



Giveaway Rules

Thanks to Mark at EMG Promotions I'm able to offer three copies of Fatal Tango by Wolfram Fleischhauser.

This giveaway is only open to the US and No P.O. BOXES please!

If you’d like to enter this giveaway please fill out this form thanks
http://www.emailmeform.com/fid.php?formid=483516

Please be a follower, thanks!

The contest runs till May 29th and ends at 11:59 PM EST!

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