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Author:
Susanna Clarke
Publication
Date: Sept
2004
Publisher:
Bloomsbury (1st ed.)
800
pages
Buy
it on Amazon
Summary
During the Napoleonic
Wars, two gentlemen sorcerors set about restoring magic in England.
In
a Nutshell
A slow, delightful
read filled with fantastic and unforgettable characters.
Review
Jonathan
Strange & Mr. Norrell is one of those books that I absolutely
adore, and yet find myself hard-pressed to recommend without a suitable
disclaimer attached. So here is said disclaimer: this novel is slow-moving,
tends to wander, and requires a lot of patience and a sizeable investment
of time. If you make this investment, however, Jonathan Strange
& Mr. Norrell will reward you in spades.
The novel takes
place in the 19th Century, and concerns itself with two English
magicians, Gilbert Norrell and Jonathan Strange, who set about to
restore English magic. Far from throwing fireballs and duelling
dragons, Norrell and Strange are beset by much more mundane challenges:
the battle for English magic is one of reputation, so the main obstacles
to the main characters' goal are English society and etiquette...
not to mention each other.
Though it might
not sound breathtaking when summed up like this, the main strength
of Susanna Clarke's novel is actually in this formidable restraint
she demonstrates throughout the book. Her world, although populated
by magicians capable of moving entire cities from one continent
to the other, and Faeries as old as Humanity itself, is actually
rooted in a deep historical realism you would normally associate
with period dramas. Ultimately, this serves Clarke's stronger fantastic
elements: since they exist in such a vividly realistic world, they
are all the more fantastic for it.
The characters
of Norrell and Strange, much like the rest of Clarke's world, are
depicted with restraint and humor, and throughout the course of
the novel, become vivid, complex, and unforgettable characters.
Mr. Norrell, for instance, far from being an exhuberant sorceror,
is an insecure middle-aged man who is obsessed with preventing English
magic from escaping his grasp. Strange, more excentric (yet still
in every way a British gentleman), serves as a delicious counterpoint
to Norrell's cavalier attitude, and the friendship and rivalry that
grows between them over the years is definitely the highlight of
the book.
This is one
of these novels that I read slowly, over the course of 2 months,
savoring one chapter every night before bedtime. By the time I reached
the last chapters, I found myself looking forward to the evening,
when I would once again spend time with the characters I loved so
much. Most of the novel is slow and the plot tends to wander without
apparent purpose, but the ending is deeply satisfying, and I am
left hoping another 800-page sequel is in the works.
Some critics
have mislabelled Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell as
a "Harry Potter for adults." This couldn't be any farther
from the truth, and does Clarke's novel a big disservice. While
both are concerned with magicians, the comparison ends there. That
being said, Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell is definitely
a mature, intricate story. Much like, say, an aged whiskey, it is
not for inexperienced palates, but those readers who like their
novels to be as complex as their drinks will find Jonathan Strange
& Mr. Norrell an unforgettable delight.
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