6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A great book, 23 Jan 2009
By Matthew Smith "Roger Mexico" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Book of the Unknown: Tales of the Thirty-Six (Paperback)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Programme
I would suggest making sure that when you start reading this book that you make sure you have plenty of time for it, because it is extremely hard to put this book down. This is the best work of fiction that I have read in a long time. I started the book yesterday and read straight through. It is really that good and that entertaining.
For such short stories the author has an amazing ability to pull the reader into the characters, and really makes the reader invest something in the story right from the beginning. This is what makes the stories so compelling, but it is the author's imagination and story telling that keeps you hooked and reading on.
Each story has the feel of a parable which was the author's intent, but the stories are not preachy. What I most enjoyed was how the author was able to employ such clever twists in the stories. At the beginning of each new story I would find myself wondering how the author is going to turn this character into a lesson. Just how was each story going to work to its unique conclusion was something I wondered with each new story.
This is just a wonderfully written book. I enjoyed every page of it, and I feel very comfortable highly recommending this excellent little book to everyone.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
luminous, 21 Jan 2009
By Seven Kitties "7kitties" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Book of the Unknown: Tales of the Thirty-Six (Paperback)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Programme
These stories are like a rich chocolate dessert--you can't read the book fast. Every story deserves a full stop, a break, to enjoy. The stories themselves are lovely, floating in a fairy tale world of odd logics (a town that refuses to sleep, a city that Death didn't visit, etc) that serve as backdrops for the themes of each story.
Like fairy-tales, also, morality doesn't often figure into the equation, and characters are types used to illustrate the larger theme; but thankfully, in these stories there *is* a larger theme to each story (what it *is* is your job to puzzle out while you digest each story). This means that if you want mystery, action, thrills, etcetera, this book may not be to your taste.
I do wonder about the necessity of the fictional scholarly apparatus that bookend the stories: I'm most familiar with that mysterious-disappearance-but-left-text device from Lovecraftian horror tales, so it reads to this reader, at least, as a bit cheezy. Not sure what his purpose is--perhaps to create some sort of DaVinci code mystique? It does seek to elevate the tales from just a story-collection, but I'm honestly not sure that they need that kind of help.
Beautiful, haunting, lyrical. A must-read.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
12 Excellent Stories Drawn from Jewish Folklore, 21 Jan 2009
By TammyJo Eckhart "TammyJo Eckhart" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Book of the Unknown: Tales of the Thirty-Six (Paperback)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Programme
Don't let the title mislead you, there are only 12 short stories here but these twelve are so well written, so engaging, and so enlightening that I devoured it in less than 24 hours. From the first page we are dropped into a fictional world where a Jewish scholar shares his latest find with us in the form of "real accounts" of the lives of the Lamedh-Vov who justify the existence of humanity in the mind of God. We meet 6 men and 6 women whose lives are both tragedy and victory as they merely live best they can, battered and bolstered by the world around them. Set in an unspecified but likely early modern Europe, we see them and feel for them as embody what might be called cultural icons. Love them or hate them, their tales touched me and made me keep reading and reading.