Saturday, May 19, 2007

Best Novel I have read...Book of Lost Things


If you're looking for a typical murder-mystery book, The Book of Lost Things definitely isn't it.


Author John Connolly manages to combine outrageous, yet believable fantasy with horrific murders while he entertains you with a story that holds you in thrall.

Mr. Connolly is probably best known for his Charlie Parker series, but The Book of Lost Things provides the weird adventures of a twelve-year-old boy.


John Connolly's imagination runs rampant, producing a hilarious twist on certain very familiar fairy stories as well as grim pseudo-reality.The twelve-year-old boy is David, who does everything he can think of to keep his mother alive while she's wasting away from a terminal illness. When she is finally gone, he and his father commiserate for a while, then his father becomes involved with another woman. David resents her, and resents both his father and his step-mother when they marry. He resents them both even more when the step-mother becomes pregnant, and his jealousy over the new brother and all the attention he gets drives him away from both parents, plunging him more and more into the world of books.


They move into the step-mother's house, which is larger – and David finds himself in a room with books left by its former occupant, who evidently ran off with a younger sister and was never seen again. The room's former occupant was Jonathan Tulvey, the step-mother's uncle, whom she had never met. The books he left behind also contained stories Jonathan had written; stories distorted by weird circumstances and uncomfortable endings. David becomes enamored of them. The setting is in England, during the Second World War, and although the 'new' house is fifty miles from London, a German plane, blazing from a direct hit by anti-aircraft guns, falls from the sky and lands in the sunken garden, where David happens to be. He crawls into an opening in the side of the garden to escape the flames, and immediately finds himself in a totally different land.


The country which David enters is full of unpleasant characters such as The Crooked Man and the Lupes, which are half-wolf, half-human. David meets two kindly characters, one a woodsman and another a knight on a white horse named Roland. Escaping from one near-disaster and immediately going toward another, David slowly realizes that he is changing from a boy to a man, with his viewpoint adjusted accordingly. He is faced with everything from homosexuality to cannibalism, and some very bizarre situations between. The actual Book of Lost Things is held before him as a promise for his safe return to his own country by the King in whose keeping it lies.When at last David's bravery is rewarded, along with his realization that the new wife his father has chosen and his new step-brother are people to cherish instead of to abhor, he's able to return. John Connolly has departed from the Charlie Parker tales only to create an amazing and accurate portrayal of a boy's natural jealousy moving into a more adult point of view. Yet that adult point of view retains, unlike a good many so-called mature people, a very positive knowledge that the supernatural actually exists.


Hooray for John Connolly!


I fell in love with this author when WA introduced me to him while we were in Turkey. I had read Black Angel - well I more than read I was glued to the book! I adore the way this man writes fiction. He has a way of blending things that just makes them so appealing even though they are horrific. Brilliant book - its keeping me going on these nights anyway...


Go get this book and probably every other book Mr Connolly has written, it is well Worth buying even at full price like I did!


Only two more nights now...

10 Comments:

Blogger lostkitty said...

wow! sounds absolutely fantastic!!! I wanna read! I wanna read! When I come to MANCHESTER you sooooooooo have to lend it to me. Wait... I'll just take it! :-P

Btw.... can we get a kitten?! lol

9:51 am  
Blogger NM said...

how about i just read your copy and promise to return this one, or i could even read it on your window seat hey hey

1:46 pm  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

After reading LOTR many a winters ago i haven't read any other fanstasy books.. doupt any any other fantsay can hold my imgination, so these days is more thriller and crime.

8:46 pm  
Blogger Ever The Idealist said...

Kitty and NM - buy your own I say. You are no longer students remember. You are now graduates with potential!!!

Dee Nooh - you missed the bit about it been gorry. Its a real murder and mayhem kinda book bro honest. Its well worth a read.

I am nearly finished so will let you know if the ending is good or disapointing. I find most goodd books have poor endings...

3:45 pm  
Blogger white african said...

all praise for white african, the auther rocks, def one of my fav

missing you ever, feels like a thousand elephants since i have seen you

10:54 am  
Blogger NM said...

I am going back to being student so i should still be allowed...sob

2:23 pm  
Blogger Ever The Idealist said...

lol!!! WA yo rock dudet, dont ever leave me ok...ever cause I WOULD FIND YOUUUUUUUUU!!

NM ok i relent you can be part of my borrowers group. you are more than welcome you know me love you log time yeah???

oh i do entertain myself so...

12:41 am  
Blogger lostkitty said...

hey! I'll be living with u! And u know i'm on permanant student-broke status! Always and forever. :-P

2:59 pm  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Sounds like a good read, will probably grab it this weekend.

4:06 pm  
Blogger Ever The Idealist said...

may you never be that for long Kitty. i am only joking corse you can be part of my borrowers as well. as are all my friends.
Aya while you are at the book shop also get abook called never let me go by some japanese dude. it was so cool and i remeber it because it is the one i read prior to this one. enjoy hon. let me know how the reading goes IA Ameen

11:06 pm  

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