

Loading... Let the Great World Spin: A Novel (original 2009; edition 2009)by Colum McCann
Work detailsLet the Great World Spin by Colum McCann (2009)
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No current Talk conversations about this book. Not since "How Green Was My Valley" have I found characters so real and so heartbreaking. There was something profound and lovely and tragic all at once and it all made me ache. I finished it 2 days ago and I'm still sighing. ( ![]() And another half star. I saw the 'Man on Wire' documentary before the 2001 Twin Towers attack and was already entranced. I guess from the acknowledgements that the author put a great deal of work into the content and construction of this book - and it shows in the best way possible - it seems so natural and effortless, almost as if he gave it a start and then it wrote itself. Written 35 years after Philippe Petit walked the wire it opens my eyes to the great differences - my world of 1974 with today and my world with New York then. And how extraordinary people are - any chance person you meet will have such a complex history, family, future. In the early chapters this feels almost like a collection of short stories, with each chapter seeming to have little connection to the others. However as the book goes on, the stories of the various characters come together. This is full of lovely, absorbing characters and writing that is wonderful in parts (if a bit overwritten in others). The conceit of the tightrope walk is clever and does something that in all probability it should not have done - it works. Thrilling, expansive, not compelling all the way through, but a worthy 21st century successor to EL Doctorow's Ragtime. Loved the circular nature of this book - separate stories all connected though one moment.
This is an exceptional performance by a writer whose originality and profound humanity is evident throughout this highly original and wondrous novel. The lousy feeling that you’ve been duped into buying a bogus product increases as you read Let the Great World Spin, and like all chintzy things manufactured for tourists, the book can’t withstand the slightest amount of tensile pressure. Apply a little scrutiny to the artistic decisions being made, and worse and worse details appear, from the awful prose, which ceaselessly pitches and yaws between staccato bursts of words and breathless run-on sentences, to the gaudy, exhibitionist displays of grief. But tackiest of all is the way that McCann deals with his African-American characters, who come off as nothing more than anthropological specimens. It is a mark of the novel’s soaring and largely fulfilled ambition that McCann just keeps rolling out new people, deftly linking each to the next, as his story moves toward its surprising and deeply affecting conclusion. ... Here and elsewhere, “Let the Great World Spin” can feel like a precursor to another novel of colliding cultures: “The Bonfire of the Vanities,” Tom Wolfe’s classic portrait of New York in the 1980s. But McCann’s effort is less disciplined, more earnest, looser, rougher, more flawed but also more soulful — in other words, more like the city itself. Gritty yet hopeful... in terms of sheer lyricism, McCann pulls out all the stops. My review copy was an absolute mess of Post-its and marked passages by the time I was halfway through. A book so humane in its understanding of original sin that it winds up bestowing what might be called original absolution... a pre-9/11 novel that delivers the sense that so many of the 9/11 novels have missed. Belongs to Publisher Series
New York City in the 1970s. A radical young Irish monk struggles with his own demons as he lives among the prostitutes in the middle of the burning Bronx. A group of mothers gather in a Park Avenue apartment to mourn their sons who died in Vietnam, only to discover just how much divides them even in grief. A young artist finds herself at the scene of a hit-and-run that sends her own life careening sideways. A 38-year-old grandmother turns tricks alongside her teenage daughter, determined not only to take care of her family but to prove her own worth. The city's people are unexpectedly drawn together by hope, beauty, and the "artistic crime of the century"--a mysterious tightrope walker dancing between the Twin Towers.--From publisher description. No library descriptions found.
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![]() LibraryThing Early Reviewers AlumColum McCann's book Let the Great World Spin was available from LibraryThing Early Reviewers. Sign up to get a pre-publication copy in exchange for a review. Author ChatColum McCann chatted with LibraryThing members from Mar 1, 2010 to Mar 14, 2010. Read the chat.
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