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Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell (Bloomsbury Phantastics)
 
 

Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell (Bloomsbury Phantastics) [Kindle Edition]

Susanna Clarke
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (365 customer reviews)

Print List Price: £9.99
Kindle Price: £2.57 includes VAT* & free wireless delivery via Amazon Whispernet
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Product Description

Amazon.co.uk

This book has been printed with two different dust jackets--one black, one white. Amazon.co.uk is unable to accept requests for a specific cover. The various covers will be assigned to orders at random.

Any book touted as the ‘adult Harry Potter’ runs the risk of attracting critical parries from swords of the double-edged variety. If this wasn’t enough, Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell--the debut novel from Susanna Clarke--also invites comparisons with Jane Austen. Set in the early nineteenth-century, the action moves from genteel drawing rooms—albeit where a mischievous Faerie king sips tea with the wife of a very human government minister, to the bloody battleground of Waterloo, where giant hands of earth drag men to their doom. The juxtaposition of perfectly realised magical worlds and the everyday one with which JK Rowling and Philip Pullman so successfully captured our imaginations and the social comedy of Austen and Thackeray can easily be recognised. But less easy to pastiche is the ability of these writers to induce sheer narrative pleasure, and it is Clarke’s great achievement that she succeeds with this hugely enjoyable read.

Gilbert Norrell is determined to single-handedly rehabilitate his sanitised and patriotic version of English magic, which has suffered a post-Enlightenment neglect after a richly dark history. He ruthlessly secures his place as England’s only magician in two marvellously drawn feats. First, he brings the statutes of York Cathedral to life and then, to facilitate his entry into London society, he brings a young bride-to-be back from the dead--a feat with terrible consequences. However, another more naturally gifted magician—Jonathan Strange—emerges to become his pupil and later his rival. Strange becomes increasingly obsessed with the Raven King—the medieval lord-magician of the North of England and pursues his desire to recruit a fairy servant to the edge of madness. Whilst the differing characters of Norrell and Strange give the book a central human conflict, it is the tension between the dual natures of civilised and wilder magic that lends it a metaphysical texture that shades the narrative with wonderful and troubling descriptions of ships made of rain, paths between mirrors and faerie roads leading out of England to a bleak yet dazzling realm. Fortunately, the precision of her storytelling never reigns in Clarke’s prodigious imagination.

Clarke’s broad canvas of characters—including Wellington, Napoleon and Bryon, locations and tones are masterfully realised. However, sometimes her own enchantment with them leads her to drop her pace, although even at almost 800 pages, this is a book to which you’ll muster up little resistance. Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell is the perfect novel to take up residence in as the nights get longer. -- Fiona Buckland

Amazon Review

This book has been printed with two different dust jackets--one black, one white. Amazon.co.uk is unable to accept requests for a specific cover. The various covers will be assigned to orders at random.

Any book touted as the ‘adult Harry Potter’ runs the risk of attracting critical parries from swords of the double-edged variety. If this wasn’t enough, Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell--the debut novel from Susanna Clarke--also invites comparisons with Jane Austen. Set in the early nineteenth-century, the action moves from genteel drawing rooms—albeit where a mischievous Faerie king sips tea with the wife of a very human government minister, to the bloody battleground of Waterloo, where giant hands of earth drag men to their doom. The juxtaposition of perfectly realised magical worlds and the everyday one with which JK Rowling and Philip Pullman so successfully captured our imaginations and the social comedy of Austen and Thackeray can easily be recognised. But less easy to pastiche is the ability of these writers to induce sheer narrative pleasure, and it is Clarke’s great achievement that she succeeds with this hugely enjoyable read.

Gilbert Norrell is determined to single-handedly rehabilitate his sanitised and patriotic version of English magic, which has suffered a post-Enlightenment neglect after a richly dark history. He ruthlessly secures his place as England’s only magician in two marvellously drawn feats. First, he brings the statutes of York Cathedral to life and then, to facilitate his entry into London society, he brings a young bride-to-be back from the dead--a feat with terrible consequences. However, another more naturally gifted magician—Jonathan Strange—emerges to become his pupil and later his rival. Strange becomes increasingly obsessed with the Raven King—the medieval lord-magician of the North of England and pursues his desire to recruit a fairy servant to the edge of madness. Whilst the differing characters of Norrell and Strange give the book a central human conflict, it is the tension between the dual natures of civilised and wilder magic that lends it a metaphysical texture that shades the narrative with wonderful and troubling descriptions of ships made of rain, paths between mirrors and faerie roads leading out of England to a bleak yet dazzling realm. Fortunately, the precision of her storytelling never reigns in Clarke’s prodigious imagination.

Clarke’s broad canvas of characters—including Wellington, Napoleon and Bryon, locations and tones are masterfully realised. However, sometimes her own enchantment with them leads her to drop her pace, although even at almost 800 pages, this is a book to which you’ll muster up little resistance. Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell is the perfect novel to take up residence in as the nights get longer. -- Fiona Buckland


Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 3840 KB
  • Print Length: 866 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 1582346038
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing (24 Feb 2009)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B003DVG7QY
  • Text-to-Speech: Not enabled
  • X-Ray: Not Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (365 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #4,515 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
123 of 134 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars I'm with Neil Gaiman 8 Oct 2004
Format:Hardcover
This is truly a fantastic book. I can't praise it highly enough. The plot, characters, pacing and, above all, the back story, make this a brilliant novel and a fantastic début. And, being a Yorkshire lass myself, it was certainly gratifying to find a novel that doesn't rampantly stereotype all Northerners.
The story begins in 1806, when two theoretical magicians with the wonderfully Dickensian names of Segundus and Honeyfoot encounter the reclusive scholar, Mr Norrell. Their quest is to find out why magic, which was once so common in England, particularly in the North under the 300 year reign of the Raven King John Uskglass, is now a distant history to be studied by gentlemen like themselves. But they discover that, for all his bookish and condescending ways, Mr Norrell is in fact a practical magician, which he proves by bringing all the statues in York Minster/Cathedral to life. Having brought his powers to the attention of the public, he immediately sets of to London, where he plans to help in the war effort against Napoleon, and in the process resurrect English magic.
At first he is not taken seriously, and it soon becomes clear Norrell will go to any lengths to become the only magician in England. But when he encounters Jonathan Strange, another magician, he seems to wake up to new possibilities. He takes Strange on as a pupil. But the two men are too different for the partnership to last. Norrell is secretive and unfriendly, hoarding magical knowledge and desperately preserving his own prestige. Strange is charming and gregarious, and becomes a hero in the wars. What starts off as mild rivalry soon escalates into a feud, with far reaching consequences.
If you've see the size of this book, you'll understand it's a hard thing to summarize.
... Read more ›
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17 of 18 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Strange by name, strange by nature 7 May 2006
Format:Paperback
The main virtue of this book is the way in which it portrays the magical, the surreal and the ridiculous whilst still assuring the reader of the seriousness of the overall endeavour. Whether its painting a scene with lashings of black humour, or dwelling casually on the gruesomeness of the living dead, we are convinced of the writer's commitment to genuine realism both in the characterisation and in the dynamics of the narrative. Whilst the Regency England depicted in the novel is a magical one, there is an internal consistency and wonderful focus on detail which draws us in to an experience which is the ultimate in escapism. The style and orthography of the writing makes you feel like you are entering a different world every time you open the book. The pseudo-eighteenth century style and orthography isn't quite authentic but gets about as close as the setting does to the historical one and creates the same kind of effect - the sense that you have happened upon some artifact of the past, but which doesn't quite match up with the reality we've always been told about. At some points in the book you almost find yourself believing that sorcery was a respected academic discipline in the early nineteenth century - they did wear those ridiculous wigs after all.
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25 of 27 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars An incredible read 29 Nov 2006
Format:Hardcover
An amazing book. How on earth the author managed to maintain so strongly the Dickensian/Jane Austenian(!) feel of the narrative I have no idea. It took me all of 3 months to read it - there was no possibility of "skipping" a passage because the whole book was so very readable and, may I say, even gripping in places - it would have been a pity to have missed any little bit of it! The principal characters are so real, despite many of them being obviously fictional and drawn from the realms of fantasy (difficult to understand, if you like), so that the reader is drawn into a web of fantasy woven into a story with some of the factual characters of history (Lord Byron, the Duke of Wellington, etc) as well as those which dwell only in the author's imagination. The footnotes are a joy - taking the story off at a tangent, but without losing the plot and returning it safely to the matter in hand. Not everyone's cup of tea, I have no doubt, but I and many of my friends thought it wonderful! A book which I will not send off to a charity shop, but which will live on my bookshelf for many years to come, to be re-read again and again, such is its charm and charisma. It will be interesting to see what the author comes up with next! Can't wait!
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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Absolutely wonderful 13 Sep 2006
Format:Paperback
This is a truly astonishing book. It is certainly very long, and might well seem a little daunting, particularly given the style in which it is written, but it well worth the effort.

It's written in a very original and inventive style - the characters are beautifully sculpted and although we're seeing them through a pre-Victorian veil of niceties and Englishness their characters, all of which are flawed to a greater or lesser extent, shine through.

The story does not develop in the usual kind of way - the "hero" (who is not particularly heroic) only meets the "villain" once, and only even knows the villain exists about four fifths of the way through the book. Even by the end of the book the various strands of the story, although heavily intermingled, have not really been tied together and although there are no unsatisfying loose-ends there is a strong feeling that almost none of the principal characters have any idea what actually happened.

In spite of (or perhaps because of) this, the story is entirely gripping, and very hard to put down. The use of language and footnotes and references makes it feel genuinely contemporary and never detracts from the story - in fact these facets add a great deal to the experience of reading this delightful book. At times it is hard to tell what characters or events referenced in the book are real and which fictional - a sign that the author has woven these two together seamlessly.

Highly recommended.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Loved it!
One of those books that seem to be quite hard-going as you read it. But when you get to the end you think - wow! Read it twice and nw ready for third time round :)
Published 2 days ago by Kate
5.0 out of 5 stars An absolute must
Magicians, faeries, plots and sub plots. This is a labyrinthine tale, cleverly crafted and superbly written. It's dark, 19th century England and beyond and an absolute must.
Published 3 days ago by Julie Rae
2.0 out of 5 stars Well written but dull
I hate giving up on books, I tend to stick with them and grind it out to the finish when it would have made more sense to give up and start something new. Read more
Published 4 days ago by Neil
5.0 out of 5 stars amazing read.
Book this book years ago and loved it. It was an amazing book with interesting concepts. I definately have no doubts about recommending this book to people. Read more
Published 4 days ago by CK
5.0 out of 5 stars beautifully written
Susanna Clarke has managed to create a fantastical and yet utterly believable world in this book. The footnotes provide much of the context for this and are vital to the story... Read more
Published 23 days ago by MiniMezzo
5.0 out of 5 stars amazing story
I loved this book so much i now own two copies and am considering purchasing one for my kindle. it is a well written tale which draws you in and leaves you wanting more. Read more
Published 23 days ago by R. Wilkinson
5.0 out of 5 stars Enchanting
For the fact that I have seen nothing like this: five stars. It is a wonderful book full of good English magic and alternate histories and stories stories stories. Read more
Published 1 month ago by JC
5.0 out of 5 stars Johnathan Strange and Mr Norrell
Item purchased as a Christmas present. It arrived in good time & was well received. Item arrived earlier than tracked.
Published 1 month ago by Madeleine
4.0 out of 5 stars Good, but long.
1000 pages is a lot of a first time author. This book had been on my wishlist for a while, so when I was offered it as a read on holiday, I grabbed it. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Christopher Smith
4.0 out of 5 stars ripping yarn
I liked it very much, the book was so heavy though I had to get the kindle version (usually read in bed) and I travel, but a great read whatever format. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Otherstuff
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