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The Girl with Glass Feet
 
 

The Girl with Glass Feet [Kindle Edition]

Ali Shaw
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (81 customer reviews)

Digital List Price: £5.57 What's this?
Print List Price: £7.99
Kindle Price: £4.46 includes VAT* & free wireless delivery via Amazon Whispernet
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Kindle Edition £4.46  
Hardcover £9.09  
Paperback £5.59  
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Product Description

Review

"'Magical' Guardian 'Ali Shaw has written a rare orchid of a book, beautiful and eccentric and exquisitely sad' Patrick Ness 'Shaw has worked the great tradition of European fairy tales and come up with an ingenious story... A magical fable of fate and resignation.' Guardian 'Virtually weightless in execution... Gorgeously written, its unsentimental confrontation with mortality belies its whimsical surfaces.' Metro 'A haunting and magical tale... Ali Shaw pulls it off in dazzling style, spinning an unforgettable story so vividly described that the reader is only too willing to suspend disbelief in order to be transported into his sad and lovely world.' Aberdeen Press and Journal 'The Girl with Glass Feet is not just special - it's remarkable... [This] debut novel conjures up the extraordinary and fantastic, yet places it firmly in our digital world... It's a very visual novel - readers who enjoy using their imagination will adore it.' Oxford Times"

Product Description

A mysterious metamorphosis has taken hold of Ida MacLaird - she is slowly turning into glass. Fragile and determined to find a cure, she returns to the strange, enchanted island where she believes the transformation began, in search of reclusive Henry Fuwa, the one man who might just be able to help...Instead she meets Midas Crook, and another transformation begins: as Midas helps Ida come to terms with her condition, they fall in love. What they need most is time - and time is slipping away fast.

Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 428 KB
  • Print Length: 292 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 1843549204
  • Publisher: Atlantic Books (1 Jan 2010)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language English
  • ASIN: B0038A852Y
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (81 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #14,462 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Ali Shaw
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
48 of 49 people found the following review helpful
By Kat
Format:Paperback
I thought this was an unusual story that was beautifully written and stayed with me long after I'd finished it. I do agree in part with some of the reviews but the book is described as a fairy story for adults and it is just that. I found Ida's condition and the random elements of magic and mystery connected to the Islands perfectly in keeping with the whole story. I didn't feel any need to question them or expect an explanation. As a first novel I thought it was exceptional and I enjoyed it far more than many stories I've read by more established and experienced authors who, in my opinion, excel in writing ability but don't necessarily have the same imagination to create such a strange and beautiful story. Read it and make your own mind up, but definitely an author to watch out for.
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31 of 32 people found the following review helpful
A Frosty Fairy Tale 27 July 2010
By Isola
Format:Paperback
"The Girl with the Glass Feet" is a grown up, European fairy tale set on a fictional northern archipelago where nature asserts itself in strange ways. Although a magical tale, the story is modern, containing real life experiences. I believe it's Ali Shaw's debut novel after his English Lit. degree.

I don't think I was sufficiently in touch with my imagination the first time I read this book - and after a second read I still can't connect with miniature flying cattle!! However, this is a hypnotic novel with an atmosphere all of its own and Shaw writes finely honed prose. His writing is very English and the story is told at a gentle pace. I think it's a young person's read, but that could be because the author himself is only in his twenties.

Exuberant Ida MacLaird, from the mainland, meets an introverted photographer, Midas Crook who was born and bred on St. Hauda's. She tries to rescue Midas from the past and he tries to rescue Ida from the future. If you changed her condition to an earthly incurable desease, I feel the story would stand alone - without the flying cattle!

But this is an imaginitive first novel full of love, but also the power, limitations and consequences of love. Although only around 300 pages it isn't an easy, or even a comfortable read at times, but it is hauntingly beautiful when Shaw paints his fictional setting in those cold Nordic hues.

I found most of the characters interesting as they were flawed; not all likable, although they were engaging - but oh how the author makes the women suffer! I also think there must be 'something' in the names of the progtagonists, 'Midas' & 'Ida' besides touch - as her name is within his, but I didn't work it out.

For me, Shaw's debut novel lacks experience, but is rich in invention; set to improve.
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43 of 48 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
'The Girl with Glass Feet' is an accomplished and beautifully written first novel. The snowbound archipelago of St Hauda's Land is poetically rendered and elements of fantasy or magical realism are effectvely counterpointed by a keen photographer's eye for naturalistic detail and a well judged sense of psychological realism.
The fantastical nature of Ida MacLaird's predicament is brought to life by the quality of the writing and an admirable attention to anatomical detail, making suspension of disbelief surprisingly easy. This is some achievement and a major strength of the book. Ali Shaw makes you believe in and care about his characters, as a result this is a moving and emotionally satisfying read.
In some ways the whole novel is an extended poem to a landscape that is both real and fantastical and echoes with it's character's past and present, their potential and their frozen emotional states. Ida's presence is transformative, most particularly for Midas, just as she herself is transformed in a terrible and tragic way.
At times along the way, the merging of reality and fantasy does throw up the odd inconsistency and unanswered question. But then, as Ian McCulloch once said when asked about his lyrics, "Who wants to explain poetry?"
Read it and enjoy.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
frustrating read
This book reads like a first novel, which it is. It is full of characters and ideas that don't appear to serve any purpose other than to bag out what might have been a decent short... Read more
Published 15 days ago by rrrrrrrrr
Surprisingly pleasing
I wasn't quite sure what to expect from this book - I picked it up from a local 'bargain bookshop' so all I had to go on was the blurb but I don't regret the purchase at all. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Alice
Soulless, boring, and characters you simply don't care about
Soulless characters. Ineptly boring and unsatisfying in plot. The most interesting thing about this book - is the title. Read more
Published 1 month ago by anon-london
Beautiful, painful, intriguing
This is a book that lingers long after you have finished the last page. The characters are all extraordinary people whose pasts are interlinked in a variety of ways, usually... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Laura B
Annoying and unfulfilling
CAUTION - POTENTIAL SPOILERS (I.E. I DO REFER TO THE ENDING)
Hoping that this would be an enchanting and interesting 'adult fairytale,' I purchased this for my Kindle - what a... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Green_Eyes
Didn't live up to expectations.
Based on the description of the story and the reviews, I really thought I was going to love this book. However, I was slightly disappointed. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Lisa H
BIZARRE
Well there were parts of this book that I thought would keep drawing me in when I got them but the whole premis of this bool, and the resultant ending, where just too bizarre
Published 2 months ago by Paul
Hmmm...
I must admit, I initially struggled to get going with this book. However once I allowed myself to go with the story, I thoroughly enjoyed it. A powerful ending that stuck with me. Read more
Published 2 months ago by JP
Spend more time on your ending!!
Awful, awful ending!! I feel robbed and deflated after reading this book. I enjoyed the idea of the book and actually got into it but i would not reccommend, as it will leave you... Read more
Published 3 months ago by Jess
Did not enjoy it
This book was shortlisted for the Costa in 2009, and Amazon had been suggesting it to me in 'Recommended For You' I think based on the fact that I had bought 'The Help' and I was... Read more
Published 3 months ago by R. A. Davison
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Popular Highlights

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&quote;
Theres no why. No how. Things happen, and all we can do is try to live with them. &quote;
Highlighted by 33 Kindle users
&quote;
What other people could not realize was that photography wasnt a job, a hobby or an obsession; it was simply as fundamental to his interpretation of the world as the effect of light diving in his retinas. &quote;
Highlighted by 16 Kindle users
&quote;
She had felt a collision with him and known that she had wanted this her whole life: to crash for just one moment into another person at such a velocity as to fuse with him. &quote;
Highlighted by 13 Kindle users

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