book data
75 ratings,
3.68
average rating, 28 reviews
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published
August 29th 2006
by Doubleday Canada
binding
Hardcover, 480 pages
isbn
0385659504
(isbn13: 9780385659505)
description
“There is a vast part of this city with mouths buried in it . . . . Mouths capable of speaking to us. But we stop them up with concrete and build ove...more
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 143)
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avg 3.68
editions: all | this edition
editions: all | this edition
"He put it [a recently excavated clay pipe:] into my hand and closed my fingers over it and he said, ‘the past really happened.’”. . . “You held it in your hand. You know something most people don’t.”
(Consolation, 435)
Consolation changed the way I look at my Toronto, the city where I live. This was not only because it asked me to imagine things like black bears walking down King St. or a graveyard (in fact, a "necropolis") at the now busy intersection of Yonge and Bloo...more
(Consolation, 435)
Consolation changed the way I look at my Toronto, the city where I live. This was not only because it asked me to imagine things like black bears walking down King St. or a graveyard (in fact, a "necropolis") at the now busy intersection of Yonge and Bloo...more
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Read in September, 2007
I will be very blunt here and tell you that at first I almost just put the book down because it did not hold my interest. After I got into the story of Jeremy Hallam, however, I regained said lost interest & was mesmerized.
Before I offer a look inside (don't worry, as always, no spoilers), I have to say that Redhill is a gifted author with great talent. His prose is incredible; small descriptions of light shining on the water, for example, are so realistic that you can truly see it...more
Before I offer a look inside (don't worry, as always, no spoilers), I have to say that Redhill is a gifted author with great talent. His prose is incredible; small descriptions of light shining on the water, for example, are so realistic that you can truly see it...more
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Read in September, 2007
(The much longer full review can be found at the Chicago Center for Literature and Photography [cclapcenter.com].)
As regular readers know, all this month I'm doing a special concentration here on the nominees for the 2007 Booker Prize, basically the British version of the Pulitzer (and a prize many think is actually more impressive than the Pulitzer); and it's no surprise that in general I've been disappointed by the nominated books I've now read, finding them on the whole to be too ...more
As regular readers know, all this month I'm doing a special concentration here on the nominees for the 2007 Booker Prize, basically the British version of the Pulitzer (and a prize many think is actually more impressive than the Pulitzer); and it's no surprise that in general I've been disappointed by the nominated books I've now read, finding them on the whole to be too ...more
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Read in September, 2008
recommended to Julie by:
Powell's Daily Dose
David Hollis spent his career unearthing artifacts of old Toronto, but at the time of his death from Lou Gehrig’s disease, his academic legacy was shadowed by his unsupported claims that a complete set of glass negatives of photos of Toronto, circa 1860, was lost in a shipwreck that now lies under landfill. However, the story doesn’t really deal with David except in flashback, as his wife, one of his daughters, and his daughter’s fiancé deal with his death by keeping vigil over a constru...more
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Read in September, 2008
recommended to Andrew by:
Indigo Sales Staffrecommends it for: anyone interested in 1800's Toronto
I liked it because of the historical perspective on Toronto's geography, but the poverty and misfortunte of the 1800's main character was a barrier for me - it brought me down. I hate to say it, but I wanted to see a happier ending. As well, the present day characters - it delt with so much personal loss that I was a little too detached to enjoy the book.
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Read in August, 2007
recommends it for:
Nina
It took me about 200 pages to get into this book. But then I enjoyed it very much. I must say that I thought the historical story was far more interesting than the present day one. I found Marianne and Bridget really annoying and their actions and words extreme. Considering that Redhill is a playwrigt, you would think that dialogue would be a strong point, but I found it to be trite. I liked the character John Lewis very much and especially enjoyed the relationship he had with David.
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Read in June, 2008
I liked the shape of this book - the idea of watching history unfold at the same time as we learn more about the narrator and family and life in the present. I also like the idea of the city (Toronto, in this case) holding so many secrets. It was well-written and compelling.
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I had a hard time getting started but then I found I couldn't put this book down. I really, really liked it.
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Read in April, 2007
From The Atlantic review
Consolation
by Michael Redhill (Little, Brown)
Lou Gehrig’s disease again! In this case, a local historian, suffering from the malady, posits, to public ridicule, that a trove of photographs of early Toronto lies beneath a landfill. Redhill, author of the affecting short-story collection Fidelity, shifts between the present-day account of the widow’s efforts to vindicate her husband and the story of the photographer in mid-nineteenth-centur...more
Consolation
by Michael Redhill (Little, Brown)
Lou Gehrig’s disease again! In this case, a local historian, suffering from the malady, posits, to public ridicule, that a trove of photographs of early Toronto lies beneath a landfill. Redhill, author of the affecting short-story collection Fidelity, shifts between the present-day account of the widow’s efforts to vindicate her husband and the story of the photographer in mid-nineteenth-centur...more
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When I was up in Stratford, Canada this summer everyone was really excited about the news that this book had been named to the Booker Prize longlist. The strongest aspect of this novel is its treatment of the city of Toronto as its own character, both as a wild youth and old man quickly losing his way in the fast pace of the modern world.
Update:
After reading The Gathering, this year's Booker Prize winner, I'm really disappointed that Consolation didn't get a bit more love from...more
Update:
After reading The Gathering, this year's Booker Prize winner, I'm really disappointed that Consolation didn't get a bit more love from...more
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Read in July, 2008
i can't really tell if it has anything to do with being in Toronto these days or.. it's simply a good novel..?
i like all the details about the photography profession and the actual names of streets and shops
it's specially exiting when I walk by one of them!!
what I mostly like about this book is the author's smooth way of jumping through time.
i'll have to agree with those who favor the historical story over the resent one
but all in all, I think it's a ...more
i like all the details about the photography profession and the actual names of streets and shops
it's specially exiting when I walk by one of them!!
what I mostly like about this book is the author's smooth way of jumping through time.
i'll have to agree with those who favor the historical story over the resent one
but all in all, I think it's a ...more
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8 comments
Read in September, 2007
It is really 3.5 stars for this one, but since it didn't get from the Booker longlist to the shortlist I am being generous. This is the kind of book I take pleasure in - a real story, with emphasis on plot and characters in contrast to, for example, Enright's "The Gathering" and McEwan's "On Chesil Beach" which are less plot driven (although they have fared better in the Booker).
I think the fact that I have just been to Toronto aided my enjoyment.
Perh...more
I think the fact that I have just been to Toronto aided my enjoyment.
Perh...more
Read in March, 2008
I'm not normally that excited about historical fiction -- let alone historical fiction featuring Toronto. There are a lot of lovely things about Canadians, but their history is not one of those.
Nonetheless, I enjoyed this. There are two dimensions to the story - one in the mid-1800's and another in modern day. The way the two are threaded together has made for an excellent read. And I learned a few things about Toronto, too.
Cheers.
Nonetheless, I enjoyed this. There are two dimensions to the story - one in the mid-1800's and another in modern day. The way the two are threaded together has made for an excellent read. And I learned a few things about Toronto, too.
Cheers.
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The author attempted perhaps more than he could deliver, but it is overreaching that distinguishes our species. Better a daring shot from horseback that misses the bullseye but thrills the mind with possibilities than a bullseye from a bench shot that confirms our expectations. The work is worth a second reading, even if one has no interest in Toronto.
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This historical novel is structured as two parallel plotlines: a modern section that describes a widow's search for a set of photographs from the 1800s and an older section that tells the story of the photos themselves. The book picked up steam towards the end and came to a nice conclusion, but I spent a *lot* of the book not really caring what heppened.
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Read in August, 2008
I thoroughly enjoyed this book. It's not a quick read, in fact I've been working on it for a while in between other books, but in the last couple of days I couldn't put it down. Two connected stories set in Toronto, one around 1850 and one in 1997. It was fascinating to see them come together.
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Read in August, 2007
One of my favourite from the Booker longlist this year. Toronto told from two different historical periods. The earlier sections far outshined the latter, but overall the novel was interesting and engaging, especially in the sections dealing with the beginnings of photography.
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