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Le mappe dei miei sogni by Reif Larsen
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Le mappe dei miei sogni (original 2009; edition 2010)

by Reif Larsen, Martino Gozzi

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
2,1641057,335 (3.87)74
This brilliant, boundary-leaping debut novel traces 12-year-old genius map-maker T.S. Spivet's attempts to understand the ways of the world, taking T.S. on a journey from his family ranch just north of Divide, Montana, to the Smithsonian's hallowed halls.
Member:niklaus
Title:Le mappe dei miei sogni
Authors:Reif Larsen
Other authors:Martino Gozzi
Info:Milano, Mondadori, 2010
Collections:Your library
Rating:
Tags:narrativa, americana

Work Information

The Selected Works of T. S. Spivet by Reif Larsen (2009)

  1. 50
    The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time by Mark Haddon (jensm)
  2. 30
    Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close by Jonathan Safran Foer (BookshelfMonstrosity)
    BookshelfMonstrosity: The precocious young narrators in each of these novels embark on journeys alone, providing illustrations to enhance their complex narratives, which include family history as well as current concerns. T. S. travels across the U.S, while Oskar travels throughout New York City.… (more)
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English (95)  French (3)  German (3)  Spanish (2)  Italian (1)  Portuguese (Portugal) (1)  All languages (105)
Showing 1-5 of 95 (next | show all)
Appropriately enough, this book was better for the journey than the arrival. I don't mean to get hung up on the scoring, but as I was reading it I though it would end up as a 4.5. but as it was concluding it felt more like a 3-3.5. Overall, I think its initial ambition and its innovativeness demands a 4.

Our hero, T.S. Spivet, is a 12-year old living on a farm in Montana, who is a very precocious and accomplished map-maker. Well, he calls them maps, but really they are any systematic diagram - essentially he uses "maps" to encompass anything that would be called "infographics". I prefer T.S.'s terminology. His accomplished diagrams draw the attention of the Smithsonian, who wish to award him a prize - so he sets off for Washington.

The book is oversized, and it needs to be, as the margin of most pages contains either examples of T.S.'s drawings, or his asides (or both). I found these pretty delightful, and they complimented the story very well. They certainly made the book an involving and lengthy read.

My issue with the book is that it sets up so much promise of this wunderkinder map maker travelling across the States, but that kinda peters out, in a jarringly perfunctory fashion (as far as something can peter out jarringly). And as it does so, slightly fantastic elements start to creep in. Secret societies, things verging on the paranormal. Not that they weren't enjoyable, but the earlier sections needed no such embellishments to keep them compelling and for me these elements detracted from the rarefied, contemplative atmosphere of the first part of the book. Once Larsen started to introduce more characters the book became much more mundane. It kinda felt like he lost faith (or possibly interest), and moved on to a resolution as quickly as possible. And in the final analysis, there actually wasn't a huge amount of plot.

That said, my depth of disappointment was due to my heightened expectations from how good the earlier parts of book were. And even as things plodded on to its perfunctory denouement there was still plenty of T.S.'s maps and personality to enjoy.

A couple of interesting points:
I bought this from a comics shop (Gosh! since you ask). This book isn't comics, but the illustrations are a bit more integral than a traditional illustrated story.
I really wonder what an ebook version would be like. Does it exist? [Apparently not]

(I'm also disappointed that the UK paperback cover is not available to be selected on Goodreads. I liked the illustration a lot).

( )
  thisisstephenbetts | Nov 25, 2023 |
I read this in anticipation of the film version I am seeing at the Film Festival later this month. The book has lots of detailed diagrams, maps, illustrations and notes to go along with the text. I enjoyed it. ( )
  secondhandrose | Oct 31, 2023 |
I'm usually very deliberate about my book rankings. I think about what I like and what I didn't like and assign and deduct points to come up with a final opinion. The Selected Works of T.S. Spivet is NOT that kind of book. T.S. Spivet gets five stars for the room-feeling of the book. Yes, it deserves them for introducing concepts such as room-feelings, for its unique approach, and for its gutsy nature. Yes, it deserves high recognition for depicting the portrait of the scientist as a young man - the coming of age of one young scientist from a obsessive prodigy who values science above all else into a nuanced adult who seeks to be a part of the world as well as depict it. It is amazing to me that I have never even heard of another book focusing on the development of a scientific mindset within a character in a way that is nuanced and treats science respectfully, rather than a foil for robotic rationalism or an idol for intelligence. Larsen uses every single trope of a conventional coming of age story, which adds to the power.

12 is such a perfect age for a child protagonist. Larsen depicts the emergent adulthood of a 12 year old almost perfectly (there are a few stumbles). Like a true tween, T.S. at times acts like an adult and at others acts like a toddler, with very few in between moments. It's rare to capture the true granular nature of coming of age, where childhood falls away chunk-by-chunk and memes of adult life settle in, rather than as a linear progression.

But despite all of that, the best thing about T.S. Spivet is simply a ton of fun. We're having a bad week at work. Everyone is cranky. Usually, the worse of a mood I'm in, the less I read (and the more I use pure escapism that doesn't require reflection) But even after long, cranky calls, all I wanted to do was read about T.S. I laughed out loud at points on his reflection on adulthood, science and cross-country travel. I flipped through to find my favorite illustrations. I smiled when he name-checked Paul Ekman (a Duchenne smile, of course.) Pure enjoyment.

There are a lot of criticisms that one could level at T.S. Spivet: it is a pretentious novel, built on a schtick. In fact, built on a ton of schticks. It's like someone got a deal on schticks: there's the child protagonist, who is a prodigy, and may also have an autistic spectrum disorder, the maps/illustrations, secret societies, a book-within-a-book, just to name in a few. Luckily, I am a sucker for pretentious novels built on schticks, so it is going to go right next to [b:Special Topics in Calamity Physics|3483|Special Topics in Calamity Physics|Marisha Pessl|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1309200115s/3483.jpg|910619] on my shelf.

More bitingly, there are several narrative threads in T.S. Spivet that never satisfyingly come together on the level of the plot: the Emma thread, the Mother as a Writer and Mother but Not as a Scientist thread, the Wormhole thread and to be honest, the Layton is Dead thread. They are all tied up from a thematic level, but I would have liked more literal closure. ( )
  settingshadow | Aug 19, 2023 |
Parte bene, poi si perde nel mezzo (l'espediente del racconto riportato funziona poco) e si riprende nel finale. I disegni a bordo pagina funzionano, ma non sempre (a volte sono un riempitivo). La cosa migliore resta l'idea, fortissima, dell'illustrare e mappare una storia (non a caso, in apertura si cita Melville, anche se omettendo la parte piĆ¹ interessante: "Le mappe mentono sempre, i veri posti non ci sono mai"). ( )
  d.v. | May 16, 2023 |
I would have loved this book if it was not for the killing of specimen bugs.

Beginning with the notebooks color coded in the bedroom map, the illustrations are fascinating. ( )
  m.belljackson | Apr 16, 2023 |
Showing 1-5 of 95 (next | show all)
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Epigraph
"It is not down in any map; true places never are." -Herman Melville, Moby-Dick
Dedication
For Katie
First words
The phone call came late one August afternoon as my older sister Gracie and I sat out on the back porch shucking the sweet corn into the big tin buckets.
Quotations
"Angela Ashford says [AIDS] are bad and that I probably have 'em."

Dr. Clair looked at Layton. The mancala pieces were still in her hand.

"If Angela Ashford ever says anything like that to you ever again, you tell her that just because she's insecure about being a little girl in a society that puts an inordinate amount of pressure on little girls to live up to certain physical, emotional, and ideological standards- many of which are improper, unhealthy, and self-perpetuating- it doesn't mean she has to take her misplaced self-loathing out on a nice boy like you. You may be inherently part of the problem, but that doesn't mean you aren't a nice boy with nice manners, and it certainly doesn't mean you have AIDS."

"I'm not sure I can remember all that," Layton said.

"Well then, tell Angela that her mother is a white-trash drunk from Butte." p. 37

I do love the sound of ripping corn husks. The violence of the noise, the sustained popping and shoring of the silky organic threads, made me think of someone tearing up an expensive and potentially Italian set of trousers in a fit of madness that this person might just regret later. p. 10
The moment that latch on my door ticked shut, I began agonizing. For the art of packing I changed into an athletic costume complete with sweatband and kneepads. This was going to be more difficult than the President's Fitness Challenge, in which I couldn't manage a single pull-up.
I put a little Brahms on the record player to calm the nerves. p. 77
How lucky I was to have grown up on such a ranch, such a castle of imagination, where hounds gnawed on bones and the mountains signed with the weight of the heavens on their backs. p. 350
"... A map does not just chart, it unlocks and formulates meaning; it forms bridges between here and there, between disparate ideas that we did not know were previously connected. To do this right is very difficult." - Mr. Benefideo, p. 138
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Wikipedia in English (2)

This brilliant, boundary-leaping debut novel traces 12-year-old genius map-maker T.S. Spivet's attempts to understand the ways of the world, taking T.S. on a journey from his family ranch just north of Divide, Montana, to the Smithsonian's hallowed halls.

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Book description
A twelve year old genius cartographer gets a call from the Smithsonian telling him he has won an award. A cross country adventure begins from Divide, WY as he maps, charts and illustrates his exploits, documents mythical wormholes and urban phenomenons and we begin to see the world thru T.S. Spivet's eyes. A family secret is revealed and as he nears his destiny, he discovers that shine and fame seem more highly valued than ideas in this new world, and friends are hard to find.
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