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Castleview by Gene Wolfe
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Castleview (original 1990; edition 1990)

by Gene Wolfe

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435857,363 (3.23)32
Castleview, an Illinois town, has a phantom castle that Will Shields sees on his first night there, an experience that involves him in murder and mysterious, life-threatening events, because the castle belongs to Morgan Le Fay.
Member:G_Riv
Title:Castleview
Authors:Gene Wolfe
Info:Tor Books (1997), Edition: 1st Orb Trade Pbk. Ed, Paperback, 278 pages
Collections:Read, unowned
Rating:***
Tags:speculative

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Castleview by Gene Wolfe (1990)

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» See also 32 mentions

Showing 1-5 of 8 (next | show all)
this is my first Gene Wolfe book i read and this is probably one of the weirdest starting points to an author's work. my reason i picked this is because of the beautiful cover art and the basic description sounded interesting. so i will go out and say this book has some really awesome ideas but it was confusing to follow at times.

the pacing is very fast and is a good page turner and its not a boring book to read. i just think the way how it jumps around and introduces the characters can be hard to follow. the characters are decent but i feel like there is abit too many of them. also the final sections of this book seem like it was going to be epic but it felt rushed with not a lot of detail to the climax wish is a shame since there was one part of it that sounded so weird that it was awesome and i would have loved to hear more about it.

i think this is a book that is hard to recommend to most people but i'm sure a lot of gene Wolfe fans will love it and maybe on a reread i would like it more but as of now i think its an average book that could have been a huge favorite. so i don't hate it or love it. i do want to read other gene Wolfe books, i just think this is not a beginner friendly book to be introduced to. ( )
  XanaduCastle | Sep 19, 2023 |
I had absolutely no idea what was going on: Gene Wolfe's CASTLEVIEW is the second of his turn of the 90's trilogy of fantastical fiction novels. The first, THERE ARE DOORS, was a rather confusing but ultimately comprehendible book, but with CASTLEVIEW the reader has no idea what's going on.CASTLEVIEW is perhaps the most infamous of Gene Wolfe's novels. Wolfe has always like to present puzzles to the reader, and every book he's written is filled with mysteries, allusions, and inside jokes. The answers to these are usually to be found after some diligent reading and research, and in any event the main plot can always be followed. In CASTLEVIEW, even the plot is totally baffling. Apparently it has something to do with magical creatures and characters from folklore, especially King Arthur and company, plaguing a modern town outside of Chicago. That's really all one can say for certain after reading the book. The entire point of the book is an enigma, and it doesn't appear that Wolfe has included the key anywhere in its 200 pages. My personal hypothesis right after reading the book was that 50 pages or so fell out of my copy during the printing process, so that I missed the part where everything comes together. However, I read the same copy everyone else did, and no one's ever shown it was incomplete. Ignoring the fact that the book goes right over the heads of its audience, CASTLEVIEW is not one of Wolfe's stronger works. I was annoyed by the speed in which Wolfe introduced new characters, so that it was difficult to follow who's who. Chapters end abruptly on some mysterious development which may create suspense but which irks the reader. Ironically, the teenagers are the only characters which are portrayed realistically, and the adults are somewhat two-dimensional, which is the opposite of how these sorts of things normally turn out. Gene Wolfe is truly one of the finest writers in the English language. His four-volume work The Book of the New Sun is legendary, and his latest work The Book of the Short Sun is filled with moments of sublime beauty and poignant emotion. I would most certainly recommend that one read Wolfe's "solar" works first (starting with the BotNS), his magisterial novel PEACE, and just about everything else he's every written before coming to CASTLEVIEW. I do recommend CASTLEVIEW, and reading the book sure does explain why so many Wolfe scholars are beating their heads against the wall on this one. Save CASTLEVIEW for last.
2 vote iayork | Aug 9, 2009 |
Brilliant bit of real-world fantasy from the master. ( )
  brianclegg | May 8, 2009 |
Weird. Very weird. Lots of suspense, but easy to get lost in. ( )
  drinkingtea | Oct 19, 2008 |
This book must be Wolfe's idea of a thriller. His methodical prose and dialogs subtly crest above a current of quickly developing events. The characters are colorful and untypical, in their own ways. The writing is concise, playful, evocative, and unpredictable. All those things make Wolfe's work a pleasure to read.

References to Arthurian legend are made throughout the book, not always implicitly. Personally, not being intimately familiar with the legend, I was able to pick out only a few non-obvious references and character identifications. Greater familiarity, I'm sure, would have only increased my enjoyment of the book.

Overall, an excellent novel, and a nice change of pace for those only familiar with Wolfe's Solar Cycle. ( )
  igor.kh | Mar 26, 2008 |
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Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Gene Wolfeprimary authorall editionscalculated
Bober, RichardCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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Epigraph
Whether liketh you better, said Merlin, the sword or the scabbard? Me liketh better the sword, said Arthur. Ye are more unwise, said Merlin, for the scabbard is worth ten of the swords, for whiles ye have the scabbard upon you, ye shall never lose no blood be ye never so sore wounded, therefore keep well the scabbard always with you.

—Sir Thomas Malory
Dedication
This book is dedicated to the memory of my father, Roy E. Wolfe, and to that of Alfred, Lord Tennyson. I'd like to thank Elliott Swanson and the folk group Barley Bree for their help, and also to send my very best wishes to Cyndi Shaffer and her colt, Urth Sun Rebel.
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Tom Howard stood at the edge of the loading dock and stared out across the storage yard.
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Castleview, an Illinois town, has a phantom castle that Will Shields sees on his first night there, an experience that involves him in murder and mysterious, life-threatening events, because the castle belongs to Morgan Le Fay.

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