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Ocean Sea by Alessandro Baricco
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Ocean Sea

by Alessandro Baricco

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60287,744 (3.99)9
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Italian (3)  English (3)  French (2)  All languages (8)
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It has taken me a while to get round to reviewing Ocean Sea as I don't think anything I write will do it justice. He writes in a way that I can only dream of being able to do.

It is written with beautiful and evocative language and I wish I could understand Italian as I'm sure the English doesn't do it justice. (This is not a criticism towards the translator.)

This is the first book I've read by this author and I'm definitely going to read his others as I enjoyed this book immensely. ( )
  span1 | Jul 20, 2008 |
Odd and haunting, sometimes terrifying, novel that centers around an artist and his obsessive relationship with the sea - the sea is at the center of all his relationships. Highly lyrical and evocative, with a mysterious air. ( )
  LoMa | Jun 27, 2006 |
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Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 0375703950, Paperback)

In Alessandro Baricco's celebrated debut, it was silk that exerted a fatal attraction. This time it's the ocean, whose watery charms cause an entire cast of characters to convene at the isolated Almayer Inn. The guests include a seductress, an eccentric professor, and a painter with a pronounced penchant for metaphysics. They're soon joined by the beautiful young daughter of a local aristocrat, who's been stricken with a mysterious illness. In a sense, however, all these characters are suffering from maladies--psychological, existential, erotic--which makes the Almayer Inn a kind of Magic Mountain with beachfront footage.

The author is a renowned opera critic in his native Italy. Perhaps this accounts for his love of linguistic arias, which can overpower the plot of Ocean Sea. When Baricco gets rolling, of course, his intricately worked prose is a delight. Even the inn itself, situated alone on a promontory, gets the red carpet treatment: "So alone it was there, it seemed a thing forgotten. It was almost as if a procession of inns, of every kind and vintage, had passed by there one day, skirting the coast, when, out of tiredness, one had detached itself from the rest, and, as its travelling companions filed past, it decided to stop on that slight rise, yielding to its own weakness, bowing its head and waiting for the end." At his best, Baricco recalls Italo Calvino--there's the same pleasure in elegant riddles and rococo storytelling. Here and there the narrative of Ocean Sea vanishes down a dead end, and the author's weakness for typographical trickery doesn't help. Still, Baricco's novel remains a refreshing dunk in what Christina Stead called "the ocean of story"--and a brainy exploration of the littoral truth. --Bob Brandeis

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:19 -0400)

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