Friday, March 5, 2021

Fiction Friday (127)

 

Having avoided contemporary fiction for most of my life, I've taken a keen interest of late. In the past year, I've read no less than four truly remarkable novels that have been published in the past few years. There seems to finally be a movement back to literary fiction after decades of fluff. There are several more novels on my must-read list, but I'm pretty close to convinced that this movement is true. My latest read was phenomenal. 

 


Piranesi by Susanna Clark

(Bloomsbury, 2020)

In the year the Albatross Came to the South-Western Halls, many extraordinary events happen within the labyrinthine halls the House. There are but two occupants of the House, as well as 12 former occupants whose bones are all that remain among the infinite statues and tides that flow through the halls and vestibules. 

Piranesi keeps a record of his days spent collecting fresh water, seaweed to dry, and offerings for the bones. He is the keeper of the labyrinth. He is one blessed by the House with its kindness. He interacts with The Other on two weekly occasions, but The Other is quite different than Piranesi. The Other is search for the Great and Secret Knowledge he believes is contained within the halls of the House. But of the course of the year the Albatross Came to the South-Western Halls, Piranesi discovers The Other is the one truly holding secrets.

There are but a few stories that attempt, and succeed so perfectly, in creating a world completely different than our own. From the opening pages, Susanna Clark fully immerses the reader in a foreign reality. It so carefully constructed that you don't feel yourself being pulled into it, you simply arrive...much like the main character. And that is the true gift of this novel, that the reader shares each discovery with Piranesi without ever knowing more or less than he.

This mesmerizing and unconventional mystery is a true masterpiece.



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