book data
786 ratings, 3.77 average rating, 95 reviews
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published
April 5th 1999
(first published 1988)
by Faber and Faber
binding
Unknown Binding, 528 pages
literary awards
Booker Prize Winner 1988
isbn
057120063X
(isbn13: 9780571200634)
description
Oscar Hopkins is a high-strung preacher's kid with hydrophobia and noisy knees. Lucinda Leplastrier is a frizzy-haired heiress who impulsively buys a ...more
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 1229)
bookshelves:
neo-victorian
Read in May, 2008
recommends it for:
those who like novels set in the 19th century and unhappy endings
(I struggled to decide between a 4 and 5 star rating on this novel. If I could I would do 4.5.)
For the past few years, I've thought about endings a lot. I've excused a lot of novels (esp contemporary ones) for bad or unsatisfying endings. Some novels end in a way that goes against all you've learned from the novel; others just... stop. Then there are the "conservative" endings of Victorian novels that many scholars complain "shut down" or tidy the "subversive...more
For the past few years, I've thought about endings a lot. I've excused a lot of novels (esp contemporary ones) for bad or unsatisfying endings. Some novels end in a way that goes against all you've learned from the novel; others just... stop. Then there are the "conservative" endings of Victorian novels that many scholars complain "shut down" or tidy the "subversive...more
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bookshelves:
favorites,
historical-fiction,
romance
Read in January, 2005
recommends it for:
tragic lovers
When I read this book I was more depressed than I've ever been. I was on the verge of quitting the Peace Corps and loathing myself for it. Then I read Oscar and Lucinda and ended up completing my service and feeling great! Just kidding.
Even though it didn't improve my circumstances or self-esteem, this book was like a gift. It's a beautifully told, terribly sad story. I'm afraid to read it again because I don't think I'll ever feel as strongly about it as I did in Namibia.
Even though it didn't improve my circumstances or self-esteem, this book was like a gift. It's a beautifully told, terribly sad story. I'm afraid to read it again because I don't think I'll ever feel as strongly about it as I did in Namibia.
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Read in December, 2007
Beautiful. Carey uses language here like a musical instrument. So different from Theft or My Life as a Fake, it flows and meanders, gently blending together subplots and characters until the inevitable conclusion.
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bookshelves:
verynice
Read in January, 2007
lucinda has a fond memory of glass and buys a glassworks factory with her inheritence.
oscar has fond memories of 'truth' and seeks a path divined by god.
they are both lonely, gamblers and meet on a boat.
oscar has fond memories of 'truth' and seeks a path divined by god.
they are both lonely, gamblers and meet on a boat.
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Read in January, 2002
Takes place in Australia, or New Zealand, I've forgotten now... A preacher and a woman find a common thread in gambling because they are both social outcasts. Slow read, I liked the movie better.
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Read in May, 2008
When I started this book I knew I was in for something different. Two gamblers fall in love and conspire to transport a glass church across the outback in colonial times? And it's good? Yes, it is good.
Peter Carey's Oscar and Lucinda was a great trip for me. I loved being immersed in the details of the 1850s and 1860s. I especially loved being immersed in the details of the mind from this period. This is not a simple love story. The characters feel deeply about many things, and have...more
Peter Carey's Oscar and Lucinda was a great trip for me. I loved being immersed in the details of the 1850s and 1860s. I especially loved being immersed in the details of the mind from this period. This is not a simple love story. The characters feel deeply about many things, and have...more
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bookshelves:
booker-prize-nominee,
books-set-in-australia
Read in May, 2006
no spoilers; just synopsis
a) don't see the movie unless you read the book...something gets really lost between the two
b)Excellent, simply excellent!!! I would recommend this book to anyone who appreciates superlative writing and a quirky story. If every book were like this one, I would be in Heaven!!!! The prose is outstanding and these characters are simply so real I thought they'd float off the page.
Oscar and Lucinda is set both in England and in Australia i...more
a) don't see the movie unless you read the book...something gets really lost between the two
b)Excellent, simply excellent!!! I would recommend this book to anyone who appreciates superlative writing and a quirky story. If every book were like this one, I would be in Heaven!!!! The prose is outstanding and these characters are simply so real I thought they'd float off the page.
Oscar and Lucinda is set both in England and in Australia i...more
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Read in September, 2008
recommends it for:
people who love dense Victorian novels
Okay, so I finally finished this, after what, 2 years? In my defence, I did lose my copy of the book when I was about halfway through. But truthfully, that isn't the *only* reason it took me so long. This is an incredibly slow, dense read, which isn't a bad thing as far as I'm concerned; it's packed very full of stunning detail that serves more to create an atmosphere (and what an atmosphere!) than to move the plot along. A great number of these details -- "long, thin, necks like twiste...more
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I caught a radio program of CBC Radio the other day. It was on the state of books and publishing. Apparently, last year 200,000 books were published in the U.S. alone, and 20,000 in Canada. And here in Canada, for every book accepted for publishing, 100 were refused. Those are discouraging figures for writers, but also adds anxiety for readers. There are so many books to chose from, and so little time. And apparently, this reader anxiety is widespread. I can relate!
I didn't like this...more
I didn't like this...more
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Read in June, 2006
recommends it for:
everyone, just, everyone
I didn't actually read this movie tie-in version. The text is the same, obviously, but my paperback has an old print of the Crystal Palace on the cover, all undergraduate intro to architecture -style.
This is one of my favorite books EVAR. It's weird, gothic, grotesque, delicate, intricate, brilliant (wonderfully well-written, and also in the sense of evoking light), horrifying, and exhilirating. None of which words mean much by themselves so I'll try and explain better.
...more
This is one of my favorite books EVAR. It's weird, gothic, grotesque, delicate, intricate, brilliant (wonderfully well-written, and also in the sense of evoking light), horrifying, and exhilirating. None of which words mean much by themselves so I'll try and explain better.
...more
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bookshelves:
favourites
Read in January, 2005
recommends it for:
people interested in how characters are drawn
Peter Carey is one of the greatest living Australian writers and he is not all that well known or liked in Australia - possibly because he committed the cardinal sin of moving to America! Some of his books are indeed heavy going and not overly enjoyable but Oscar and Lucinda is masterfully put together - entertaining to read and interesting as an example of how to draw utterly rounded and compelling characters.
Oscar and Lucinda are portrayed not just from their own perspectives but from ...more
Oscar and Lucinda are portrayed not just from their own perspectives but from ...more
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bookshelves:
2008,
booker-prize
Read in December, 2008
It is to Peter Carey’s credit that I fell so hard for all of his characters that the end of the book saw me saddened for both the fate of some few characters and the story’s end.
Carey’s clever, attentive writing, evocative of a witty 19th-century tale teller, takes a story charming enough on its own and turns it into something brilliant. Definitely deserving of its Booker Prize win in 1988.
Carey’s clever, attentive writing, evocative of a witty 19th-century tale teller, takes a story charming enough on its own and turns it into something brilliant. Definitely deserving of its Booker Prize win in 1988.
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5 comments
Has a copy to sell/swap
—
Read in April, 2007
i am a sucker for the epic stories ~ books that make your purse bulge and tend to dominate your life for a month or two ~ gone with the wind...anna karenina...the fountain head...~ and this book, for me, ranks right up there with those listed.
i actually want to sit down and ask mr. peter carey (who lectures at hunter college in nyc), what the significance is with the the prince rupert's drops? and how he could let the film version get away with such a drastic change in the way the ...more
i actually want to sit down and ask mr. peter carey (who lectures at hunter college in nyc), what the significance is with the the prince rupert's drops? and how he could let the film version get away with such a drastic change in the way the ...more
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Read in June, 2007
recommends it for:
anyone
I gave this book 3 stars (instead of 4 only because I didn't like it quite as much as I did the other books by Peter Carey that I've read (My Life as a Fake, True History of the Kelly Gang, and Theft). Peter Carey is so talented that I feel justified in holding him to a higher standard.
It's hard to pin down exactly what I felt was missing from this novel. I guess it was the end that I wasn't crazy about, as the story and the characters start to drift off into an Australian sort of h...more
It's hard to pin down exactly what I felt was missing from this novel. I guess it was the end that I wasn't crazy about, as the story and the characters start to drift off into an Australian sort of h...more
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2 comments
I found it a struggle to finish this book but I eventually did. I wanted to really enjoy it but I have read 3 of Careys books now and I have finally admitted to myself that I don't enjoy his style at all!
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Read in January, 2008
This book starts with swarms of details that I wanted to bat at like gnats, disperse the cloud. Especially since it starts with descriptions of dreary English weather... something guaranteed to get my goat. And make it kick.
But then the details coalesce into patterns, and then into characters.
And then all of a sudden I'm feeling for them, sympathy and elation, and wondering how it was that I didn't recognize them before.
This story is a twisted romance, and the...more
But then the details coalesce into patterns, and then into characters.
And then all of a sudden I'm feeling for them, sympathy and elation, and wondering how it was that I didn't recognize them before.
This story is a twisted romance, and the...more
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Oh dear. So much verbage. And such a ridiculous story... Not good for a bookclub. To many words and too little to discuss. Ook.
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bookshelves:
h-romance
Got too bored to finish this book halfway through, left it in a hotel room in Baltimore--I wanted to like it, just couldn't!
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bookshelves:
to-read
hmm wish the person I bookmooched this from had told me that the book was underlined. It seems the person who marked it up was overly enthusiastic and arbitrary... As in every other sentence in the book is underlined. Should be fun to see how long it takes before I can ignore it.
I'm beginning to think that Peter Carey is just not for me. I hated My Life As Fake(and it deserved to be hated). But I can see why people appreciate Oscar and Lucinda. Yet 100 pages in, and I still can't see...more
I'm beginning to think that Peter Carey is just not for me. I hated My Life As Fake(and it deserved to be hated). But I can see why people appreciate Oscar and Lucinda. Yet 100 pages in, and I still can't see...more
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Read in September, 2008
Beautifully written, excruciatingly long.
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Looks like we have a tie - let's try this again between the 2 books
oscar Oscar and Lucinda
fern tattooThe Fern Tattoo
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