Showing posts with label stories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label stories. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 29, 2019

story magic

The Starless Sea by Erin Morgenstern
Genre: fantasy
Rating: 4.5 stars (out of 5)
Review: This is a book about the power and magic of stories.  It is best read in print, and possibly by candlelight, for all the magic to come through, but even reading the e-book was very magical.

There's no meaningful way to sum up this book or to adequately capture the beauty of the language except to say that the story is wonderful and the language more than does it justice.  But here's a taste (and definitely not the best taste, but the easiest one to take out of context): "I don't know if I believe that [endings are what give stories meaning].  I think the whole story has meaning but I also think to have a whole story-shaped story it needs some sort of resolution.  Not even a resolution, some appropriate place to leave it.  A goodbye.  I think the best stories feel like they're still going, somewhere, out in story space."  And later, "...no story ever truly ends as long as it is told."

Morgenstern is true to her word here.  In and around all this magic and fancy, there's an actual plot, which is brought to something sort of like a resolution by the end.  But this story definitely keeps going.  Not in the sense of needing a sequel (although I wouldn't complain), but in the sense that it will live in my head for a long time to come.

FTC Disclaimer: I received this book from the publisher in exchange for this review.

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

Jane Eyre with a twist

The Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield
Rating: 4 stars (out of five)
Genre: fiction, mystery, Gothic
Challenge: A-Z (title)
Review: This was a very engaging story. Written in the style of a Gothic novel, this story is very reminiscent of Jane Eyre, with a unique twist. The secret to the story is revealed to the reader as the main character figures it out, in a very realistic way.

What prevented this book from getting 5 stars was what I felt to be an unnecessary subplot that only served to bog the story down. I understand that our main character needed a "hook" of some kind to be convinced to write the biography she's been charged with writing, but I felt that Setterfield took the "ghost story" aspect of her lost twin too far.

That would not stop me from heartily recommending this book to anyone who likes Gothic novels.