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Loading... The Sorcerer's House (original 2010; edition 2010)by Gene Wolfe
Work InformationThe Sorcerer's House by Gene Wolfe (2010)
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. It was an interesting books with lots of things to think about. I really did not like how he wrote all the female characters and how there were some characters or events that popped up and then were never mentioned again. It is one that would probably be better on a reread, but the female characters just made it feel dated. I was very interested to read this book as Neil Gaiman had mentioned he was reading it. As I enjoy what Mr. Gaiman writes, I hoped I would enjoy something he was reading. Unfortunately, that was not the case. The narrative was through letters between the characters describing what had happened and the views of those not involved directly. The twists and turns the storyline took upon itself didn't add false directions but rather seemed to make the story drag on longer than it needed to. no reviews | add a review
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In a contemporary town in the American Midwest where he has no connections, an educated man recently released from prison is staying in a motel. He writes letters to his brother and to others, including a friend still in jail. When he meets a real estate agent who tells him he is the heir to a huge old house, long empty, he moves in, though he is too broke to even buy furniture, and is immediately confronted by supernatural and fantastic creatures and events.His life is utterly transformed and we read on, because we must know more. We revise our opinions of him, and of others, with each letter. We learn things about magic, and another world, and about the sorcerer Mr. Black, who originally inhabited the house. And then perhaps we read it again. No library descriptions found.
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.54Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1945-1999LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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Maybe I'm one of those lazy readers that Neil mentions in his review, but I never quite "got" this book, other than it's written as a series of letters to and from an ex-con who starts out as a squatter and becomes the owner of a house with odd properties and odd characters hanging about.
The writing is clear, if oddly flat for such a fantastic situation (a naked woman shows up and he simply accepts the situation and takes advantage of it? real people don't do that, do they? well, maybe someone who's been in prison for three years). This may be consistent with typical letter-voice, but made the reading uninteresting. In addition, many of the the letters felt less like letters than simply first-person storytelling, which was a disappointment (unlike World War Z, which always felt like edited interviews).
Sorry to say that because I found the writing so flat and, dare I say, boring, I skipped through the book. That means I probably missed some interesting parts and clues to the puzzles to which other reviewers have referred. I suppose I was never really interested enough in the outcome to care about the puzzles as they were simply and straightforwardly described and dispatched.
Gene Wolfe has such a huge reputation that I will have to read something else he's written. I am presuming it will be better than this. ( )