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Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell

Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell
by Susanna Clarke
Hardcover: Sep 2004,
800 pages.
Paperback: Sep 2005,
800 pages.

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First book/First Novel


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Page 2 of 3 There are currently 13 reviews
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Rated 5 of 5 of 5 by Dave Westervelt
I am surprised to find any nay-sayers for this story. When I finished I had the delightful dual sensations of sorrow that I had finished a story that had so drawn me in and joy that I had had the opportunity to partake in such a story as is provided by Ms. Clarke.

This story was written as all stories should be. She took ten years to research, write, and refine. Each character is clearly thought out. And no parts of the story could be removed without a change to the plot. Ms. Clarke brilliantly built this story without any extraneous material; it constantly builds upon itself.

I must admit, though, that I am surprised to read these reviews that link Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell to Harry Potter and Lord of the Rings. While I suppose that, upon reflection, I can see certain similarities, I never for a moment thought of Ms. Clarke occupying shelf space beside the garishly colored fantasy novels in a book store.

This book was recommended to me by the only person whose every recommendation has been excellent; I only hope that the surpassing quality of Ms. Clarke's story will be remembered.

Rated 3 of 5 of 5 by Yipiyuk
JS just doesn’t make the grade. The characters had the potential to be interesting, the plot had all the right elements of suspense, and the concepts were good, but it simply missed the mark. The style was dry and slow, more like an out-dated textbook than a fiction novel.

About 3/4 of the way through the book the style changed – this section of the book was very well written and showed me how the rest of the book could have been. Sadly the author lost the thread, and the ending was a true disappointment (no details here... if you want to find out what happens read it yourself!).

The bottom line is that this book had the potential to be truly incredible but the writing was dry and uninspired and highly mediocre.

Rated 5 of 5 of 5 by Mark Sceviour
I am a huge LOTR fan. I am not a big fan of Mr. Potter. So when this book was listed as the adut version of H.P, I was not pleased. I am a fan of history. This book almost convinced me that England had a strong magical past. This is a historical novel wrapped around the personal conflict of two feuding friends.

I do admit that you need to take your time reading this book. You have to enjoy the footnotes, not be put off by them. For me it was not a quick read. I rather liked it that way. It made the history more real. I had months to believe in it. In the end I could have read another 782 pages and not been put off.

I know that New Line has the rights for the movie, and while they did a great job on LOTR's, I am afraid they will cut out allot of the details in this story, to make it spead up.

If you enjoy being convinced that what you are reading is real, then pick up J.S & M.N.


Rated 4 of 5 of 5 by Robert
Almost inevitably, low ratings have come from people who have not finished Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell. A notable exception is the negative The New Yorker review posted above in Book Browse.

It may be that people not meant to enjoy the book soon recognize so and put it down, or that the ending pulls together the myriad details and characters of the langorous beginning. I personally enjoyed the slow beginning of this clever, intriguing, rich, and luxurious epic. As its large supporting cast of beguiling Dickens and Austen character types pop in and out, the faux history of magic woven into 19th century England history has the feel of being written 200 years ago.

A reviewer at audible.com puts it well:
[quote] Best Listen In a Long Time
5 stars. Reviewer: Andrew, from Madison, WI, USA Date: December 30, 2004

I never take the time to review the books I listen to off audible unless they are terrible or amazing, this one is amazing. There are other decent reviews of the plot, similar authors etc. so I will just hit two points:

1. The narration is excellent, it is saying something when a deep voiced man can accurately portray a female character with nuance and feeling and bring tears to my hard heart.

2. The massive detail and interesting footnotes make for a long book and for 80% of it's progress one is left interested but not knowing what it is all about. I consider this more of an asset than a defect but if you need everything spelled out for you and good and bad guys assigned clearly it may be frustraiting. It is not ADD friendly, it reads like it was written by someone who loves to read intricate books not someone who wanted a simple plot so it would make a easy screenplay (tho it is being made into a film anyway). As a result if you do not get past that 80% mark you are missing out on a real gem.

In closing this was an excellent listen, if you like the fantasy work of Ursula K. LeGuin (the books, not the worthless tv show) chances are you will love it.[/quote]


Robert

Rated 1 of 5 of 5 by Madonna Nugent
I was so excited when the New York Times raved about this book, calling it the adult's version of Harry Potter. What a lot of rubbish. What an insult to JK Rowlings books, hers leaves this one for dead. After reading the New York Times, I quickly gleaned the information on the internet and brought it on line from overseas and had to wait 10 days for it to arrive. Finally it came and I started reading with great anticipated. Alas, what a let down it turned out to be. The story is all over the place with the slightest of thread binding the plot together. There is endless ramplings on of notes in the footers and I must say I am over one third of the book, with not the slightest bit of enthusiasum to read on. I'm just reading for the sake of reading, as I am going overseas on holidays and wish not to read the other books I have just purchased until them. I was going to save this book for the holidays but instead I can hardly wait to finish this dull, uninteresting mindless rampling of nonsense.

PS - when the book was published in Australia it was going for half price days after hitting the shelves. What does this say to you? The person who does the critics for the New York Times needs to be fired.

Rated 2 of 5 of 5 by g55luckie
Man, is this book overhyped. I think it will be like "...And Ladies of the Club" -- many will buy but few will read.

About half-way through, I stopped because the plot -- what little there was -- had completely disappeared. I couldn't even summon up enough interest to learn what happens when a feud starts.

I wished I had saved my time. And I definitely was glad I had borrowed, not bought, the book!
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