A "New York Times Book Review"Notable Book of the Year A "Los Angeles Times" Best Book of the Year London, 1782: center of science and commerce, home to the newly rich and the desperately poor. In the midst of it all is the Giant, O'Brien, a freak of nature, a man of song and story who trusts in myths, fairies, miracles, and little people. He has come from Ireland to exhibit his size for money. O'Brien's opposite is a man of science, the famed anatomist John Hunter, who lusts after the Giant's corpse as a medical curiosity, a boon to the advancement of scientific knowledge. In her acclaimed novel, Hilary Mantel tells of the fated convergence of Ireland and England. As belief wrestles knowledge and science wrestles song, so "The Giant, O'Brien" calls to us from a fork in the road as a tale of time, and a timeless tale. Hilary Mantel's novels include the Orange Prize-shortlisted "Beyond Black "and" A Place of Greater Safety." She lives in England. London, 1782: center of science and commerce, home to the newly rich and the desperately poor. Among them is the Giant, O'Brien, a freak of nature, a man of song and story who trusts in the old myths. He has come from Ireland to exhibit his size for money. He has, he soon finds, come to die. His opposite is a man of science, the famed anatomist John Hunter. Hunter lusts after the Giant's corpse, a medical curiosity, a boon to the advancement of scientific knowledge. In her acclaimed novel, Hilary Mantel tells of the fated convergence of two worlds: Ireland and England, poetry and science. As belief wrestles knowledge, so the novel calls from a fork in the road. It is a tale of its time, a timeless tale. "Hilary Mantel has felt herself into the poetics of history with singular intensity. A brilliant pastiche, drawing on Swift and Joyce, deploying all the tricks of understatement and of what the great Russian formalist Shklovsky called 'making it strange, ' it triumphantly justifies and reanimates these well-worn methods."--John Bayley, "The New York Review of Books" "Mantel's new novel is a bizarre and morbid account of the meeting of art and science. In 1782, Irish giant Charles O'Brien arrives in London with an agent, an entourage, and a willingness to exploit himself for financial gain. He is a learned man, knowledgeable in myths and stories, yet it is his size that attracts the interest of John Hunter, surgeon, scientist, and collector of biological and medical oddities. Hunter is determined to add the Giant to his collection and bides his time until the Giant's declining health and financial ruin signal the end of his life. Hunter's calculated efforts to acquire O'Brien and the willingness of the Giant's associates to barter for his bones are chilling depictions of greed and selfishness. Mantel tells a classic tale, rich with the sights, sounds, and smells of 18th-century London."--Dianna Moeller, Lacey, Washington, "Library Journal" "The title character in Mantel's grimly lyrical latest novel is in flight from a number of horrors. He arrives in London in 1782, having fled the famine and violence that is devastating his native Ireland. He is fleeing as well his despairing conviction that the past of the Irish people, represented by a vast reservoir of myths and historical narratives, is vanishing as those charged with remembering that glorious past die off. O'Brien, by the standards of his day a giant, has allowed himself to be convinced by a none-too-bright promoter that he can make a fortune by allowing himself to be exhibited in London ('like the sea and gallows. It refuses none'). Swiftly, he finds one more fury to flee, this time in the person of John Hunter, a premier anatomist who uses grave robbers to supply his seemingly insatiable need for corpses to dissect. Hunter, having heard of O'Brien, becomes obsessed with the idea of possessing the giant's bones for his museum of anatomical oddities. Once again, Mantel uses characters to probe at larger truths--here, O'Brien, who is a great taleteller, a repository of Ireland's imaginative past, seems to represent a belief in the redemptive power of art and wonder, besieged by the 18th-century's ferocious scientific rationalism: Hunter wants desperately to understand what life is, but can only pursue it by destroying it. O'Brien enjoys a floating fame, falls on hard times, and ends up in a squalid freak show. Sickening, he's aware that his nemesis Hunter is feverishly attempting to buy the rights to his corpse from the show's owner. Dying, he dreams of his life as it might have been, if he had been a poet. As it is, it seems certain that 'stories could not save him.' Distinguished by a deft use of voices (from O'Brien's soaring lyricism and earthy humor to Hunter's desiccated musings) and by a vivid portrait of the feculent underside of London: a fresh, moving meditation on the sources of wonder and the dangers of a depraved rationalism."--"Kirkus Reviews" "The most engaging moments in Mantel's intriguing new novel occur when the uneducated Irish characters who make up the loutish retinue of "The Giant, O'Brien" converse. Perfectly imagining the vocabulary and inflections of Irish peasants whose stark ignorance leaves them agape at the wonders of 1782 London, Mantel produces dialogue that is at once credible and funny. Here, as in many of her novels, cultures collide, and individual human beings suffer as a consequence. Taking as her inspiration the 18th-century Irish giant Charles Byrnes, whose bones are still on exhibit in a London museum, Mantel has imagined the fate of the man, who leaves the dire poverty and scorched earth of the Irish countryside and comes to London entertaining grandiose fantasies of riches and respect, but who encounters disillusionment and his own mortality instead. In counterpoint to the giant, who lives in Ireland's glorious past, spinning folktales and fables to earn his bread, another emigre to London, Scottish surgeon James Hunter (also a real figur
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这本书的叙事节奏变化非常独特,它时而像夏日午后慵懒的微风,让情节在悠长的回忆和细碎的日常中缓缓流淌;但下一刻,笔锋又能骤然收紧,抛出一个令人心惊胆战的转折点,让你不得不猛地坐直身子,屏住呼吸去捕捉那些稍纵即逝的线索。我尤其欣赏作者对于内心独白的运用,那不是简单的心理活动记录,而更像是一首首自我审视的、充满悖论的诗歌。书中关于“选择”与“宿命”的探讨贯穿始终,但它从不给出简单的答案,而是将矛盾抛给读者,让你自行去分辨,在人性的幽暗与光明之间挣扎。某些段落的文字密度极高,句子结构复杂,初读时需要反复琢磨,但一旦领会其韵味,那种智力上的满足感是无与伦比的。那些象征和隐喻如同散落在故事各个角落的珍珠,需要你用心去串联,每一次的发现都像是对作者匠心独运的一次赞叹。这本书绝对不是那种可以快速浏览的作品,它需要你投入时间、情感和思考,回报你的,将是对人性复杂深度的全新理解。它在探讨宏大主题的同时,又将视角牢牢固定在个体命运的微观层面,这种平衡处理得极为高明。
评分这部作品的后劲实在太大了,以至于我合上书后,花了很长时间才真正回到现实生活中。它探讨的伦理困境,那种“两难选择”的深度,让人不得不审视自己在一系列相似情境中会做出何种反应。书中对社会阶层固化以及个体在强大社会结构面前的无力感,刻画得入木三分,那种深深的无望感几乎要透过纸页渗透出来。作者没有急于评判对错,而是将人物置于极其严酷的道德炼狱中进行烘烤,迫使他们做出选择,并承担所有后果。这种对人物命运的“无情”观察,反而体现了一种更高层次的尊重——尊重人物选择的自由及其带来的沉重代价。我尤其喜欢结尾的处理,它没有采用那种一了百了的圆满结局,而是留下了一个充满张力的、开放性的场景,仿佛故事还在继续,人物的命运仍在继续书写。这使得整部作品的余韵悠长,它不仅仅是一个被讲述完毕的故事,更像是一个在你心中持续发酵的哲学命题。
评分这本书带给我一种久违的、阅读经典文学时的庄重感。它似乎在刻意抗拒现代叙事的轻快和碎片化,选择了一种更接近十九世纪现实主义小说的厚重和宏大。故事的核心冲突,关于荣誉、背叛与救赎,虽然主题古老,但作者赋予了它们全新的、带有现代困惑的解读。它挑战了传统的英雄叙事,让那些本该光辉的角色身上布满了人性的污点,而那些看似边缘的人物,却在关键时刻展现出令人惊叹的道德勇气。我特别关注了作者对时间线的处理,他并不总是线性叙事,而是通过闪回和预示,像织布一样将过去与现在交织在一起,使得事件的因果关系愈发耐人寻味。每一次看似偶然的巧合,当你读到后面的章节时,都会恍然大悟,原来这一切早已在开篇时就被精心埋下了伏笔。这种结构上的精妙设计,让我在阅读后期充满了“原来如此”的兴奋感。它要求读者保持高度的专注,但回报是极其丰厚的知识和情感体验。
评分这本小说的开篇,那种扑面而来的乡土气息和人物间微妙的权力角力,立刻就抓住了我的全部注意力。作者对环境的描摹细腻入微,仿佛能闻到空气中泥土和汗水的味道。尤其是对主角性格的塑造,那种根植于土地的坚韧与某种近乎野蛮的生命力交织在一起,让人既敬畏又同情。故事线索的铺陈并不急躁,而是像老藤缠绕一样,层层深入地揭示出小镇上错综复杂的人际关系网。邻里之间的猜忌、家族内部的陈旧规矩,都在日常的琐碎对话中被不动声色地展现出来。我特别喜欢作者处理冲突的方式,它不是那种戏剧性的爆发,而更像是缓慢渗透的地下水,一点点地改变着地表下的结构。读到主人公与那个似乎代表着外界文明的角色的第一次交锋时,我几乎能感受到双方那种格格不入的张力,那是两种完全不同世界观的碰撞,充满了宿命般的悲剧色彩。整本书读下来,有一种强烈的感受:你看到的不仅仅是一个故事,更像是一幅精心绘制的、关于特定年代和特定地域生活的全景图,每一个细节都充满了生活的质感和历史的重量。这种沉浸感,让人在合上书页后,仍久久无法从中抽离。
评分从文学技巧的角度来看,这本书的对话艺术简直是教科书级别的典范。角色们说话的方式、他们选择的词汇,无不精准地勾勒出他们的社会阶层、教育背景乃至当下的情绪状态。有些角色的语言是粗粝而直接的,充满了未经修饰的力量;而另一些角色的言语则滴水不漏,每一个字都像是经过反复权衡才说出口的。这种鲜明的对比,使得人物之间的互动充满了火花和潜在的危险信号。我曾多次停下来,仅仅为了回味某一句看似不经意的对白,因为我知道,这句话背后隐藏的含义,可能比它表面的意思要丰富和沉重得多。此外,作者对场景氛围的营造也达到了炉火纯青的地步,比如那场发生在暴风雨之夜的家庭聚会,文字本身似乎都带着潮湿和寒意,而角色们压抑的情绪则在雷电交加的背景下被推向了顶点。它不是靠情节的曲折取胜,而是通过语言的张力和场景的沉浸感,让你在不知不觉中被拖入那个世界,成为了一个无声的旁观者,见证着那些不可挽回的时刻。
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