datchristy
New Member
I have a (mostly) book review blog called All From Books that can be found here http://www.allfrombooks.com/
Here's an excerpt from my latest review, which is of From the Mouth of the Whale by Sjón.
This book has a lot of twists and turns, but it is fascinating. I have no idea about whether the superstitions and beliefs are accurate for the 15th century Iceland, but I would like to believe so. Sjón includes what I believe are period accurate superstitions about things like coral in little sections that have a feel of a dictionary. These seem to be randomly interspersed throughout the book, but tells the tales of sea serpents and some possible home remedies.
Jonas narrates the story, and I got the feeling that he was a little crazy. This was the first time that I felt like I was actually reading a story by an unreliable narrator. I’ve been told in school about unreliable narrators and read stories that featured them, but I was never able to really feel that they were unreliable myself. I mean any story from a first person narration needs to be examined from all ends, not just narrator. In this book, there were small discrepancies and it made the story more enjoyable and entertaining as I tried to figure out if Jonas was losing his mind or just leaving out details on purpose.
Here's an excerpt from my latest review, which is of From the Mouth of the Whale by Sjón.
This book has a lot of twists and turns, but it is fascinating. I have no idea about whether the superstitions and beliefs are accurate for the 15th century Iceland, but I would like to believe so. Sjón includes what I believe are period accurate superstitions about things like coral in little sections that have a feel of a dictionary. These seem to be randomly interspersed throughout the book, but tells the tales of sea serpents and some possible home remedies.
Jonas narrates the story, and I got the feeling that he was a little crazy. This was the first time that I felt like I was actually reading a story by an unreliable narrator. I’ve been told in school about unreliable narrators and read stories that featured them, but I was never able to really feel that they were unreliable myself. I mean any story from a first person narration needs to be examined from all ends, not just narrator. In this book, there were small discrepancies and it made the story more enjoyable and entertaining as I tried to figure out if Jonas was losing his mind or just leaving out details on purpose.