Piranesi
By Susanna Clarke
Bloomsbury Publishing, 9781635577808, September 2021, 272pp.
The Short of It:
Wildly imaginative.
The Rest of It:
Our main character is called Piranesi, although he knows this is not his real name. He lives in a house with many halls and rooms. Each room is filled with beautiful statues in various stages of decomposition. Many, damaged by the birds or the harsh salt water environment. Because you see, this “house” has been taken over by the tides and the sea life within it. Fog rolls in. Rain is the only source of fresh water. Piranesi lives here with one Other, literally called “Other” and he tends to the many remains of those who came before him.
I am not much of a fantasy reader but from page two, I was completely sucked into this story. For one, the writing is lovely. Two, I could “see” this house in my mind. And although it’s a lonely kind of story, Piranesi is a happy person, content with keeping track of the tides and his research. But as you read, many questions come to mind. How did he get there? What has happened to civilization? Why doesn’t he leave?
I read an interview with the author and how she was suffering from Chronic Fatigue Syndrome while writing this. How she felt so isolated from the real world, while tending to her debilitating illness. This definitely played a role in how the story plays out. The isolation is palpable but so is hope.
This story is so different and refreshing. There’s enough of a mystery to pull you in, but your heart will be with Piranesi as he tries to piece this all together. It’s a fascinating read. I really need to own a nice physical copy of this one. I can see myself picking it up again to read soon. A classic.
Source: Borrowed
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I saw this on sale and ordered it yesterday after reading all your praises. Sounds so different.
It’s very different and it felt so rich for a story that is under 300 pages.
Just put this on my library hold list!
This book will stay with you. I can’t wait for you to read it.
What an intriguing idea and when you mentioned the author’s isolation, it seemed to fit with the story.
And the book isn’t all that long. Under 300 pages and it was so full. You know what I mean?
Wow, that sure sounds different than anything I’ve read before. I checked and my library has it so I may get a copy sometime.
This is such a great book! So haunting and almost poetic!
I am still on the fence about this book. I want to know more. Is there a plot/story, or is it more atmospheric? I think I would have to be in the right mood to truly enjoy this book.
There is a story and you do find out what’s going on. I steered clear to avoid any spoilers.
I loved this and was so relieved to love it. After all these years of wishing Susanna Clarke would write another book, it was thrilling to actually get one and have it be excellent.
I haven’t read her last book. Should I? I heard it was a beast.
And it won the 2021 Women’s Prize for Fiction! yes, so much in few pages.
This sounds so intriguing, and given what you’ve said it kind of reminds me of your favorite author Murakami!
I’m so excited to read this book. I ordered the audio version as soon as I read your IG post. It sounds great!