Friday, February 1, 2008

878. Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell (Susanna Clarke)

Synopsis from Amazon:
It's 1808 and that Corsican upstart Napoleon is battering the English army and navy. Enter Mr. Norrell, a fusty but ambitious scholar from the Yorkshire countryside and the first practical magician in hundreds of years. What better way to demonstrate his revival of British magic than to change the course of the Napoleonic wars? Susanna Clarke's ingenious first novel, Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell, has the cleverness and lightness of touch of the Harry Potter series, but is less a fairy tale of good versus evil than a fantastic comedy of manners, complete with elaborate false footnotes, occasional period spellings, and a dense, lively mythology teeming beneath the narrative. Mr. Norrell moves to London to establish his influence in government circles, devising such powerful illusions as an 11-day blockade of French ports by English ships fabricated from rainwater. But however skillful his magic, his vanity provides an Achilles heel, and the differing ambitions of his more glamorous apprentice, Jonathan Strange, threaten to topple all that Mr. Norrell has achieved.

My rating: 4 stars

My review: The writing is excellent and the basic plotline is very interesting. Unfortunately, it takes a while for the story to gather momentum and capture the reader's interest (or at least this reader's interest -- for the first 100 pages I had no idea where the story was going). But, once it does, the book is fun.

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