October 2024
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    I’m looking for some fiction suggestions for nighttime reading based on books and authors I already like.

    I really enjoy the magical realism of The Master and Margarita, 100 Years of Solitude and Haruki Murakami books.

    I also really enjoy the books of Joan Didion, John Darnielle, Dave Eggers, Daniel Wallace and recently read The Crying of Lodge 49 which I really liked but didn’t love- I enjoyed the characters and mystery but it left me wanting something more.

    Anyone have any suggestions?

    by ThrowRA_rekind3567

    2 Comments

    1. downthecornercat on

      Wolf Hall is a great glorious beast of a book. Like the hike up a steep sloped volcano, no rest for the reader but the imminent sense of power and danger, the spectacular views. Some will find the reading arduous, I know many have complained they are confused, that was never my experience.
      My first thought was Marquez-like, and as in Hundred Years of Solitude many characters have the same name. Our central protagonist is Thomas Cromwell (not Thomas Wolsey, Thomas Audley, Thomas Avery, Thomas Wriothesly, Thomas Boleyn…. certainly NOT Thomas Moore… nor Thomas Howard…) and as portrayed here he – Cromwell – is fascinating.
      This character study is one of three great accomplishments in Wolf Hall. Well, this one study in particular. Many characters are well created, multi-faceted, engaging, surprising, believable, but Cromwell is Mantel’s Odysseus, her man of many tricks. Often fierce but with a tender side, clearly ambitious for wealth & comfort but with a generous side, always restless intellectually and often physically. The reader is always curious to what is coming next, as is Cromwell, and sharing this view we proceed through the violent late-medieval sectarian civil war that is England before the Renaissance.
      This is Mantel’s second triumph. She has clearly done her homework, and she brings life to the history. The setting is rich and detailed from high to low, from who wore which silks to which servants most likely had fleas. Palaces, inns, monasteries & prisons are peopled and alive but also detailed for their structural gifts and flaws, their component materials, feels and smells. Affairs of State are conducted but by humans portrayed as having humble desires, strengths, flaws, who get distracted, or grumpy, or shy… who have homes to go to (or to be kept from while imprisoned) with people they love (or don’t). The rich fullness of her portrayal of time place people is impressive.
      And lastly, complexity of tone: the book is funny and grim, sad and frustrating, graceful and illuminating, snide and humane. But instead of becoming a mess – this becomes a success. Though Mantel has chosen to be many things, she loses track of no threads and the reader comes away with a full tapestry rather than a mere sketch.
      Full five stars.

    2. dondeestalalechuga on

      For magical realism, you might enjoy Like Water for Chocolate by Laura Esquivel, and Isabel Allende’s books e.g. Eva Luna or The House of the Spirits.

      You might also like A Tale for the Time Being by Ruth Ozeki. It’s not magical realism, but it has metafictional elements (I think if you like Dave Eggers you would like this) and is about a writer who finds a Japanese teenage girl’s diary washed up on the beach – the novel is told from both perspectives.

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