![]() Full of the magic and mayhem you might expect, Piranesi introduces a labyrinth to savour ― NetGalley UK’s Top Ten Books of 2020 Susanna Clarke's long-awaited Piranesi is utterly compelling - bewildering, intense, moving, shocking, combining a haunting fantasy with sharp insights about a culture of domination, hierarchy and rivalry and about how the imagination can survive in such a world - Rowan Williams ― New Statesman Books of the Year A remarkable feat, not just of craft but of reinvention ― Guardian Susanna Clarke's first novel since 2004's Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell was more than worth the sixteen-year wait. Piranesi is a tenebrous study in solitude. it took root in me - Jenny Colgan ― Spectator, Books of the Year Like Hilary Mantel, Clarke made the very notion of genre seem quaint. a delight - as if Borges wrote a novel with a beginning, middle and satisfying end - Naomi Alderman ― Spectator, Books of the Year My absolute favourite book of the year by miles. To say more would be to ruin one of the year's more unusual reading experiences ― i paper, Books of the Year 2020 This tale of weird enchanted halls is close to perfect ― The Times, Books of the Year A warm book about losing and finding oneself about what humanity could have lost in the process of becoming rational ― BBC.com Purely joyful reading. Piranesi (the name is one of several allusions to the 18th century) spends his days interpreting coded messages left around a labyrinthine villa filled with seabirds and symbolic statues ― Financial Times, Books of the Year Susanna Clarke's new novel is a beguiling study of isolation and exile. For fantasy readers often eager to get lost in mystical worlds and escape the complications of real life, Piranesi's predicament deeply resonates ― Time, Books of the Year The long-anticipated second novel from the author of 2004's best-seller Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell is a philosophical fantasy. A masterful work of weird fiction, it's a novel that grips, perplexes and moves you, usually all at once! ― Observer, The Best Books of 2020 The fiction, nonfiction and poetry that deepened our understanding, ignited our curiosity and helped us escape. Reminds us of fiction's power to take us to another world and expand our understanding of this one ― Guardian, Autumn highlights It's always great to have some fiction to heartily recommend, and while there's been stiff competition this year, Piranesi by Susanna Clarke has won out in the end. ![]() It is a miraculous and luminous feat of storytelling' MADELINE MILLER 'Brilliantly singular' SUNDAY TIMES 'A gorgeous, spellbinding mystery … This book is a treasure, washed up upon a forgotten shore, waiting to be discovered' ERIN MORGENSTERN 'Head-spinning … Fully imagined and richly evoked' TELEGRAPH _ 'What a world Susanna Clarke conjures into being … Piranesi is an exquisite puzzle-box' DAVID MITCHELL 'It subverts expectations throughout … Utterly otherworldly' GUARDIAN 'Piranesi astonished me. The Beauty of the House is immeasurable its Kindness infinite. The world that Piranesi thought he knew is becoming strange and dangerous. But who are they and what do they want? Are they a friend or do they bring destruction and madness as the Other claims? Lost texts must be found secrets must be uncovered. Messages begin to appear, scratched out in chalk on the pavements. At other times he brings tributes of food to the Dead. ![]() On Tuesdays and Fridays Piranesi sees his friend, the Other. ![]() In his notebooks, day after day, he makes a clear and careful record of its wonders: the labyrinth of halls, the thousands upon thousands of statues, the tides that thunder up staircases, the clouds that move in slow procession through the upper halls. WINNER OF THE 2021 WOMEN'S PRIZE FOR FICTION A Sunday Times & New York Times bestseller The spectacular new novel from the bestselling author of JONATHAN STRANGE & MR NORRELL, 'one of our greatest living authors' ( NEW YORK MAGAZINE) _ Piranesi lives in the House.
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