I had hoped it would get better. it did not
2 stars
Unlikable characters didn't help. There goes 30h of my life!
Unlikable characters didn't help. There goes 30h of my life!
Published March 20, 2006 by Circulo de Lectores.
Published in 2004, it is an alternative history set in 19th-century England around the time of the Napoleonic Wars. Its premise is that magic once existed in England and has returned with two men: Gilbert Norrell and Jonathan Strange. Centred on the relationship between these two men, the novel investigates the nature of "Englishness" and the boundaries between reason and unreason, Anglo-Saxon and Anglo-Dane, and Northern and Southern English cultural tropes/stereotypes. It has been described as a fantasy novel, an alternative history, and a historical novel. It inverts the Industrial Revolution conception of the North-South divide in England: in this book the North is romantic and magical, rather than rational and concrete.
Published in 2004, it is an alternative history set in 19th-century England around the time of the Napoleonic Wars. Its premise is that magic once existed in England and has returned with two men: Gilbert Norrell and Jonathan Strange. Centred on the relationship between these two men, the novel investigates the nature of "Englishness" and the boundaries between reason and unreason, Anglo-Saxon and Anglo-Dane, and Northern and Southern English cultural tropes/stereotypes. It has been described as a fantasy novel, an alternative history, and a historical novel. It inverts the Industrial Revolution conception of the North-South divide in England: in this book the North is romantic and magical, rather than rational and concrete.
Unlikable characters didn't help. There goes 30h of my life!
Unlikable characters didn't help. There goes 30h of my life!
skönt brittiskt språk
lätt osammanhängande
ADWHJUSGLUFRLUAFKHLFAEULfwehowefifufzcfi no puedo con mi vida
pensaba que sería más 4 o 4.5 estrellas (porque es muy largo y después de alguna pausa ya no me acordaba de mucho de lo que había pasado antes), pero escuché las últimas 200 páginas en una sentada y me ha matado.
definitivamente recomiendo el audiolibro, no solo por su calidad, sino porque hace que la experiencia sea mucho menos pesada. no sé si me hubiese acabado este libro en físico xddd.
así del propio libro no sé ni qué decir. los personajes, el mundo, la magia... es que todo es increíble ayuda asjsahgsdhg. norrell es un gaslight gatekeep girlboss, jonathan mi feral child, emma pole, arabella y stephen REINAS Y REY DE MI UNIVERSO.
sé que no se sabe nada sobre la supuesta secuela, pero cuando se publique me la meteré por el culo muy fuertemente. necesidad seria, de verdad.
adjunto unos posts …
ADWHJUSGLUFRLUAFKHLFAEULfwehowefifufzcfi no puedo con mi vida
pensaba que sería más 4 o 4.5 estrellas (porque es muy largo y después de alguna pausa ya no me acordaba de mucho de lo que había pasado antes), pero escuché las últimas 200 páginas en una sentada y me ha matado.
definitivamente recomiendo el audiolibro, no solo por su calidad, sino porque hace que la experiencia sea mucho menos pesada. no sé si me hubiese acabado este libro en físico xddd.
así del propio libro no sé ni qué decir. los personajes, el mundo, la magia... es que todo es increíble ayuda asjsahgsdhg. norrell es un gaslight gatekeep girlboss, jonathan mi feral child, emma pole, arabella y stephen REINAS Y REY DE MI UNIVERSO.
sé que no se sabe nada sobre la supuesta secuela, pero cuando se publique me la meteré por el culo muy fuertemente. necesidad seria, de verdad.
adjunto unos posts de Tumblr sobre el libro que me hacen mucha gracia. seguramente añadiré más con el tiempo. también aviso que pueden tener spoilers:
https://beetleandfox.tumblr.com/post/673826602489200640/so-imagine-youre-in-high-school-and-youre-kind
https://www.tumblr.com/palavapeite/664503787480858624/look-a-squirrel-breaking-news-local-british
https://plain-flavoured-english.tumblr.com/post/681627152771334144
https://ohveda.tumblr.com/post/667052717180665856/i-have-to-add-the-original-tags-because-thehttps://croclock.tumblr.com/post/619382197363867648/lost-hope-gang-the-stranges-bonusyre-so
I really wanted to like this, given all of the good reviews. I tried the written book, I tried the audio book. There was a review that said it got better about 8 hours in. I just couldn't make it - there were interesting moments, but it felt like a chore to keep trying to come back to this book.
I really wanted to like this, given all of the good reviews. I tried the written book, I tried the audio book. There was a review that said it got better about 8 hours in. I just couldn't make it - there were interesting moments, but it felt like a chore to keep trying to come back to this book.
Wonderful and magical. Creepy and fun! Great characters. Loved this!
Unbearable, boring, pretentious. When I have to force myself to read even a few pages from a book, it means I'm not enjoying it at all. That has been happening for the last months with this unswallowable brick.
The thing I regret the most, is having left aside so many other books I wanted to read, because I'm used to read only one book at a time.
I guess I'll just watch the TV series, just out of curiosity. I hope it's more enjoyable than this book.
Unbearable, boring, pretentious. When I have to force myself to read even a few pages from a book, it means I'm not enjoying it at all. That has been happening for the last months with this unswallowable brick.
The thing I regret the most, is having left aside so many other books I wanted to read, because I'm used to read only one book at a time.
I guess I'll just watch the TV series, just out of curiosity. I hope it's more enjoyable than this book.
I wrestled with giving this 3 or 4 stars. It’s an intricate weaving of stories, some mundane, some extremely exciting. It is one of those weird books that I'm happy I read but will probably never read again.
I wrestled with giving this 3 or 4 stars. It’s an intricate weaving of stories, some mundane, some extremely exciting. It is one of those weird books that I'm happy I read but will probably never read again.
Susanna Clarke’s first novel is an extraordinarily imaginative tale about two magicians during the early 1800s, in which magic and fairies are not merely trickery and sleight-of-hand, but real enough to jump out of the pages. There are a multitude of characters in this novel, and they are all described in lavish detail. Some have Dickensian names, too.
This is a large book--782 pages, which includes lots and lots of tiny footnotes, which function as both asides and background. On some pages, the footnotes actually take over the page, and are some of the most ingenious parts of the book.
We meet Mr. Norrell first. He is a rich, scholarly recluse who lives to read magic books. In fact, he’s intentionally bought up all the available magic books for the purpose of preventing anyone else from studying magic. Norrell is the epitome of self-centered and egotistical, and decides that he …
Susanna Clarke’s first novel is an extraordinarily imaginative tale about two magicians during the early 1800s, in which magic and fairies are not merely trickery and sleight-of-hand, but real enough to jump out of the pages. There are a multitude of characters in this novel, and they are all described in lavish detail. Some have Dickensian names, too.
This is a large book--782 pages, which includes lots and lots of tiny footnotes, which function as both asides and background. On some pages, the footnotes actually take over the page, and are some of the most ingenious parts of the book.
We meet Mr. Norrell first. He is a rich, scholarly recluse who lives to read magic books. In fact, he’s intentionally bought up all the available magic books for the purpose of preventing anyone else from studying magic. Norrell is the epitome of self-centered and egotistical, and decides that he is the man to bring magic, long absent, back to England.
Now that I’ve introduced this--man, I’ll skip up to p. 82, and tell you about the event that puts all the events in motion: in order to gain attention and adoration, especially from the English government, Norrell uses what he calls black magic to summon a fairy to help him bring back to life the recently-deceased Lady Pole, the wife of a government minister. However, this fairy, who we only ever know as “the gentleman with the thistledown hair,” is just as mean and egotistical as Mr. Norrell, and so demands something in return: for restoring the life of the young Lady Pole, he lays claim to half of her life, and Mr. Norrell agrees to this, because he doesn’t really care about the young lady, and it never occurs to him that he has no right to play God.
Not much later, Norrell discovers that the gentleman with the thistledown hair interpreted “half of her life” as “every evening.” In other words, she’s under an enchantment, and basically his slave. Lady Pole’s life becomes a misery, and people assume that she is mad. Eventually, the gentleman with the thistledown hair victimizes two other people, as well.
Bringing a young woman back from the dead certainly earned Mr. Norrell his fame, as well as the attention of the government. Soon, the government ministers found him meaningful employment, such as casting spells to protect England’s shores from her enemies.
Almost two hundred pages go by before we meet Jonathan Strange, who is a very different kind of man, and much younger. Strange eventually becomes Norrell’s pupil, much to many people’s surprise. However, Norrell is still stingy and secretive; Strange never does have the full run of the old man’s library (until the very end), and is, at first, kept in the dark about much of magical history.
Mr. Norrell uses his notoriety and his pupil to advance the notion, (in a periodical publication), that English magicians ought not to have anything to do with fairies--that fairies were dangerous, crazy, and evil, and magicians who used them as servants were being lazy, since it was totally unnecessary. He especially villifies John Usglass, better known as The Raven King, the king of all fairies.
Of course, the reader knows about Norrell’s hypocrisy all along. Jonathan Strange eventually quarrels with Norrell over the idea that they should be presenting to the public a more balanced view of magical history , and not just Norrell’s opinions. Strange publishes his view that there would be no magic if there were no John Usglass, and the two magicians part ways.
Meanwhile, the gentleman with the thistledown hair has his own plans....including taking Arabella Strange (Jonathan's wife) as another of his slaves, and setting up the English Butler Stephen Black as King of England (against his will. He's unhappily enchanted, too).
Will these three victims escape their enchantment? Will Mr. Norrell ever have to face the music for what he did to Lady Pole? What about the gentleman with the thisledown hair? Will The Raven King return and set all to rights?
Oh, and there's another big problem, but I will stop writing about the book's plot, now.
I was gently drawn into this novel--it wasn't exactly an urgent read, but it was--enchanting. Susanna Clarke does a wonderful job imagining Jonathan Strange’s relationships with real people, such as Lord Byron and the Duke of Wellington. My only fault with the book was that the section about Strange’s service to Duke Wellington during England’s war against France dragged a bit.
And the end? The end is WIDE open--I believe there is to be a sequel.