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Written for older children with a fascination for the future, Jan Mark has produced an epic, intricate and timely novel which takes the world's two main obsessions--a total eclipse of the sun and our entry into a new millennium--and has turned them into a totally compelling read that will enthral as many adults as it will younger readers.
Keith, a young man taking a break from university, has a near death experience which leads him to take a journey to the mysterious Qantoum, a town no one has ever heard of in the deepest, emptiest heart of Asia. There he meets a cast of characters who befriend him and gently push him forward on his journey towards the new century.
Written with a stylish, dry, wit, Keith's adventure--unnerving and eerily dreamlike, yet at the same time uncannily linked with a reality that is at once terrifyingly complex and comfortably simple--takes the reader on a tour of a place which could well hold the key to the future, and perhaps is not as far away from the truth as we would like to believe.
A dream of a book for anyone with a love of good writing packed with imagination, humour and detail that can at times make the eyes water, The Eclipse of the Century is a must-have for anyone, whatever their age and beliefs, who wonders what the future may hold. (Ages 12 and over). --Susan Harrison
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An extraordinary and haunting book,
By
This review is from: The Eclipse of the Century (Paperback)
I recently re-read this book, having first read it very shortly after it was published. When I first read it, I expected it to win all the awards going and I am amazed it hasn't. It is an extraordinary book. The mystery at its heart draws you in slowly, as does the haunting description of a war-torn and forgotten central Asian city inhabited by an odd assortment of people. After a few chapters you find you can't put the book down....There are some VERY unusual animals in it - in fact it is a book with some wholly original ideas and characters throughout. I fell in love with Kije. A darkly humourous book - not whimsical like many children's books now. I suspect it falls somewhere between being a book for much older children and for those adults who read children's books for reasons other than comfort- probably why it is less well known than it should be.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The greatest teenage novel no-one has heard of? A lost classic?,
By
This review is from: The Eclipse of the Century (Paperback)
I have just re-read "Eclipse" after a gap or a couple of years and I am again bowled over by a totally superb novel - and novel indeed in every sense of the word. Yet it is overlooked by, well, practically everyone. Perhaps people see it as "out of date" - a millennium "tie-in", a book written to cash in on the 1999 eclipse. They could not be more wrong.
Some say it has a slow beginning - but that "slowness" is so necessary. Just like Keith - the central character - you are lured in to the life of this forgotten outpost in the depths of central Asia where things are indeed slow. Its at times whimsical, comical. Qantoum becomes a real place - so real you start looking at maps wondering where it is because the description is just so perfect. If towns like this do not exist in central Asia then they should! Then - about half way in - you suddenly begin to get a little uneasy. This strange demi-paradise, this island surrounded by sand, does it have a dark side? Like Keith you could walk away at any time, but like Keith you are now hooked as like an snowball becomes an avalanche Keith's world starts to plummit out of control up to the tragic - but very open - ending. It is another example, of course, of how "teenage" fiction surpasses anything the world of adult writing can produce. It is gripping. There are no answers. The people are real - not black and white hats, every hat is grey! Don't hesitate - buy a copy of this today. And I'll see you "under a black sun at the end of 1,000 years"!
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An immensely powerful and gripping tale,
By Booksthatmatter "Booksthatmatter" (Brighton, UK) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Eclipse of the Century (Paperback)
Jan Mark's book was something of a revelation to me - and it is also a book which deserves to cross over into adult readership. The author takes us on a surreal journey into a scaring and unsettled place - I've never travelled into the furthest reaches of the former Soviet Union - where Russia met Asia - but I was wholly convinced by the arid, semi-inhabited world of Qantoum. The events that unfold in this half-way place are apocalyptic and gripping. I'd give it to anyone over the age of 14 to read. Immediately.
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