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Jonathan Levi (1) (1955–)

Author of Guide for the Perplexed

For other authors named Jonathan Levi, see the disambiguation page.

2+ Works 149 Members 5 Reviews

About the Author

Image credit: By Sh2711 - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=47602865

Works by Jonathan Levi

Guide for the Perplexed (1992) 101 copies, 1 review
Septimania: A Novel (2016) 48 copies, 4 reviews

Associated Works

Granta 60: Unbelieveable (1997) — Contributor — 131 copies
Granta 1: New American Writing (1990) — Contributor — 46 copies, 2 reviews
Scribblers on the Roof: Contemporary Jewish Fiction (2006) — Contributor — 36 copies, 2 reviews

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1955
Gender
male
Education
Yale University
University of Cambridge (Clare College)
Occupations
editor
novelist
critic
opera composer
dramatist
playwright
Organizations
Granta Magazine (co-founder)
Metropolitan Opera Guild
Richard B. Fisher Center For The Performing Arts at Bard College
Short biography
American author and playwright Jonathan Levi has written the novel A Guide for the Perplexed, several operas including The Scrimshaw Violin and plays including Falling Bodies and Changing Keys. Co-founder and co-artistic director of Nine Circles Chamber Theater, he is currently working on a new novel and a musical. 
[from capricertosa.com - 2009]
Birthplace
New York, New York, USA
Associated Place (for map)
New York, USA

Members

Reviews

6 reviews
Have you ever found yourself in a dream that is just totally fucked up and makes no sense, but you're dreaming, you have no choice, and the dream just goes on until you finally wake up in a cold sweaty bed needing a change of sheets, a hot shower and mug of cocoa?

Well this is the literary version, and it's someone else's fucked up dream you're stuck in.

I say 'you're stuck in', like you couldn't just delete it from your Kindle if you wanted to, but that's the thing, you just don't want to. show more Like the fucked up dream, you just seem to be stuck in it and you have to wait until the end when it releases you back to reality.

I won't say more as i wouldn't want to spoil it for any literary masochists out there, other than buyer beware. It will seriously disturb you that you wasted your time reading it, but once you start reading it you'll be in it until the end - you have been warned!
show less
I could hardly put this book down. It was kind of surrealistic. It had the hidden history thing going on kind of like Dan Brown and some mystical characteristics. The characters were very original. There were joyous and heartfelt times throughout the story. I really enjoyed this story. It was one that you wanted to get to the end to see how things ended but you didn't want the story to end.
I found this book difficult to get my head around. I quite liked the central character as a person, but the meanderings into parallel fantasies did me in. Probably too cerebral for me at my time of life.
½
I did not enjoy this book at all. It may be that it was all just over my head, but I also found it boring, disjointed and irrational. The one redeeming thing I took from this novel is that there actually was a King/Kingdom of Septimania - he ruled for approx 140 years, and it is a lost fact of history! Please see Boris Feldman's review (April 12, 2016) for a link to a review of his book for details about the true story!

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Statistics

Works
2
Also by
3
Members
149
Popularity
#139,412
Rating
½ 3.3
Reviews
5
ISBNs
27
Languages
3

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