The Somnambulist |
| | | | Title: | The Somnambulist | | Author: | Jonathan Barnes | | Publisher: | William Morrow | | Type: | Book / Hardcover | | Publication Date: | 01 February, 2008 | | ISBN / ISBN-13: | 0061375381 / 9780061375385 | | List Price: | $23.95 | | You Save: | $6.46 | | Amazon Price: | $17.49 | |
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Product Description
Be warned. This book has no literary merit whatsoever. Needless to say, I doubt you'll believe a word of it. Once the toast of good society in Victoria's England, the extraordinary conjurer Edward Moon no longer commands the respect or inspires the awe that he did in earlier times. Despite having previously unraveled more than sixty perplexing criminal puzzles (to the delight of a grateful London constabulary), he is considered something of an embarrassment these days. Still, each night without fail, he returns to the stage of his theatre to amaze his devoted, albeit dwindling audience with the same old astonishments—aided by his partner, the silent, hairless, hulking, surprisingly placid giant who, when stabbed, does not bleed . . . and who goes by but one appellation: The Somnambulist On a night of roiling mists and long shadows, in a corner of the city where only the most foolhardy will deign to tread, a rather disreputable actor meets his end in a most bizarre and terrible fashion. Baffled, the police turn once again in the direction of Edward Moon—who will always welcome such assignments as an escape from ennui. And, in fact, he leads the officers to a murderer rather quickly. Perhaps too quickly. For these are strange, strange times in England, with the strangest of sorts prowling London's dank underbelly: sinister circus performers, freakishly deformed prostitutes, sadistic grown killers in schoolboy attire, a human fly, a man who lives backwards. And nothing is precisely as it seems. Which should be no surprise to Moon, whose life and livelihood consists entirely of the illusionary, the unexpected, the seemingly impossible. Yet what is to follow will shatter his increasingly tenuous grasp on reality—as death follows death follows death in the dastardly pursuit of poetry, freedom, utopia . . . and Love, Love, Love, and Love. Remember the name Jonathan Barnes, for, with The Somnambulist, he has burst upon the literary scene with a breathtaking and brilliant, frightening and hilarious, dark invention that recalls Neil Gaiman, Susanna Clarke, and Clive Barker at their grimly fantastical best . . . with more than a pinch of Carl Hiaasen–esque outrageousness stirred into the demonically delicious brew. Read on . . . and be astonished!
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Terrific Novel! 02 October, 2008 Very well-written, fascinating novel about Victorian London with exotic characters, an amazing plot and a satisfying ending. Well-worth reading and let's hope the first-time novelist has more books up his sleeve.
- Reviewed by customer ID: AEC3QB3IBQRGV
Great Characters With Snark 04 October, 2008 Edward Moon is a "conjurer", an entertainer struggling to preserve what little reputation and income he has left. Among polite society he is now more likely considered a laughingstock than the once promising investigator propelled by his sharpened abilities of examination. Considered past his prime, his Las Vegas-styled evening show, set in Victorian era London, is now only attracting the fanatically faithful. So Moon, along with the Somnambulist, his giant, deathly pale, almost human-like partner in crime-solving and fright inducing sidekick, is bored. Yet that is about to change.
As far as crime solving duos go could this very well be the Victorian era predecessor to our modern day Starsky and Hutch? As far as mysteries go, probably not so much, as Sherlock and Watson might have proven a more apt comparison. At least Watson talked. The Somnambulist, on the other hand, doesn't; he would rather accompany Moon silently grasping his pints of milk.
If such a bizarre introduction to The Somnambulist intrigues you, then by all means delve deeper than the surface just scratched, as this book by Jonathan Barnes turns more curious by the page. But it is as entertaining as it is strange; Moon is as stubbornly cynical, full of snark as he is determined to solve what is the most important threat facing London. And the Somnambulist is, well, the Somnambulist. But will that threat be The Directorate, an assassin known only as The Mongoose, the fun-loving Prefects, or the very literary Chairman itself? Full of intrigue, murder, and curiosity, this story is all wrapped up into a very sharply-written novel. It's dark, creepy, and humorously suspenseful. And it's only the first novel written by Barnes.
- Reviewed by customer ID: A1JUFCGU0L6H37
The Somnambulist - Jonathan Barnes 25 October, 2008 Writing Style - 3/5
Characters - 1
Storyline - 1
Resonance - 1
The-Not-Too-Revealing Synopsis:
A carnavalesque part-time detective in Victorian London interplays with the city's most interesting tenants to solve a murder.
The Review:
If you wish the book curious and eccentric read no further than page eleven. Beyond that it is a mystery without curiousity and preposterous without eccentricity. The enjoyment to get out of this is the same to be gotten out of really bad, low budget science fiction movies. The complication that arises, as with other works of a satirical nature, is to determine what is deliberately ridiculous and what is simply balderdash. Almost every character in the book is of the weird and bizarre variety and almost every encounter worthy of a plot climax. The plot is the only aspect that shows any respectable development and it is only the humorous and thoughtful phrasing of Barnes' writing that made this endurable. I recommend this only to those who proudly own the Sci-Fi Channel's Worst-Of Collector's DVD.
- Reviewed by customer ID: A8FGXUTCS09NK
Endings Confuses But Rest Of Story Is Entertaining 10 October, 2008 Edward Moon is a magician, a master of slight of hand who, because of his mastery of observation, has aided Scotland Yard in solving crimes. He also has an enemy of whom he is ignorant and it's this enemy who tells the story. That is one of two arguments I have with this tale which is entertaining with its plot twists and turns. This first-person observer isn't revealed until late in the story, is never known to be around Moon, so how does he know what's going on so intimately? The Somnambulist, Moon's assistant in his act, a mute giant of a man who appears impervious to wounds from any type of weapon is a interesting character...he doesn't speak but writes his dialogue on a slate generally in one or two misspelled words. He's intelligent and often times more prudent than his partner when it comes to his actions. There are several references to events happening before the start of the story which will pique the reader although no further information is given. The story is reminiscent of A. Conan Doyle or Anne Perry's stories of Victorian London, but I found the ending to be a bit of a let-down in its ambiguity. Perhaps I'm just too obtuse, but I'm still trying to figure out whether it actually happened or not. Don't let that stop you from reading this book--perhaps you'll be smarter than I, and figure it out!
- Reviewed by customer ID: ALMVAXOHKUIVW
All Style, No Substance 03 November, 2008 The writer's style is engaging, but it wears thin after a while, and there isn't enough meat to the story to take up the slack. The plotting is haphazard, with odd lapses in continuity, and an ending that comes out of nowhere. Reminiscent of Tim Powers work, but without the historical grounding that makes reading powers so rewarding.
- Reviewed by customer ID: A3Q0T50ZHFQ3VC
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