Particularize Of Books Black Wine
Title | : | Black Wine |
Author | : | Candas Jane Dorsey |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | Special Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 285 pages |
Published | : | November 15th 1997 by Tor Books (first published 1996) |
Categories | : | Fantasy. Fiction. Science Fiction. Science Fiction Fantasy. Speculative Fiction. Feminism |
Candas Jane Dorsey
Paperback | Pages: 285 pages Rating: 3.73 | 326 Users | 54 Reviews
Explanation To Books Black Wine
Why is there an old woman, in a hanging cage for punishment, keeping a journal written in blood? Candas Jane Dorsey has written an ambitious, feminist novel about women coming to terms with their identity in a barbarous fantasy world. Dorsey's women travel across the world, from the slave dens to the merchant cities, across seas by ship and by dirigible, to isolated mountain villages and back again. "But there remains provocative ambiguity as the story progresses. There is a woman exiled from her family, a mother who has abandoned her daughter, an old woman in a cage, a young women slave on a lord's estate who does not remember her past. How many of them are the same woman?Declare Books In Pursuance Of Black Wine
Original Title: | Black Wine |
ISBN: | 0312865783 (ISBN13: 9780312865788) |
Edition Language: | English |
Literary Awards: | IAFA William L. Crawford Fantasy Award (1997), James Tiptree Jr. Award (1997), Prix Aurora Award for Best Long Form Work in English (1998) |
Rating Of Books Black Wine
Ratings: 3.73 From 326 Users | 54 ReviewsComment On Of Books Black Wine
Reading this book felt like a dream. And sometimes a nightmare. The setup of the book was really unique and intriguing, in the first half. The way the story lines seem disconnected and eventually intertwine is perfect, but I can see where some would find the vagueness annoying. This kind of flowery prose isn't for everyone, and I found myself having to reread a lot of sentences just to understand the clunky wording. The world building was wonderfully done. It doesn't spell anything out, and aThis is one of those books that defies categorization. Not sure where I picked it up, but after reading the description I was wondering if it would be dense, pedantic or otherwise offputting. None of the above. It was certainly dark but also showing a sense of the beauty that resides in those dark times. I'm still not sure if I completely understand the full arc of the story, but then again I don't know if the reader is supposed to. In the end that doesn't detract from the story but leaves it
4.5 starsThis book is as rich, complex, and worth savoring as one imagines the eponymous black wine to be. The characters are delightful and intriguing, and hold up well to the multiple-narrator structure (unlike certain other books The Boleyn Inheritance I've read recently). The plot is intricately structured and well-paced, and the themes are interesting without being overbearing. On top of all that, it is beautifully written, including some brilliant turns of phrase, one of my favorites being
A woman flees her despotic family and home; a woman bereft of family traces retraces her mother's footsteps towards that same home. I love how Jo Walton writes on this book, because that rhapsodizing is a necessary counterbalance to some of the objective flaws. The dense, mirrored, disjointed plotlines feel more like a stylized concept of identity and inheritance than a realistic depiction of two lives; the various locations and relationships are rendered complex and immediate when present, but
Couldn't finish
Slow paced and elusive.
A well written book with good ideas. Another book I picked up because it was written by a Canadian. Just not my typical type of fiction that I enjoy.
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