The Prestige Movie Tie In

by Christopher Priest
The Prestige Movie Tie In  
published October 3rd 2006 by Tor Books
first published 1995
binding Mass Market Paperback
isbn 0765356171   (isbn13: 9780765356178)
pages 368
literary awards James Tait Black Memorial Prize, World Fantasy Award
description The Washington Post called this "a dizzying magic show of a novel, chock-a-block with all the props of Victorian sensation fiction: seance...more
date added
01-24-07



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Martine
bookshelves: british, film, magic-realism, modern-fiction, pseudo-nineteenth-century
Read in December, 2007
Like many readers, I came to this book after seeing the excellent 2006 film based on it. Like many other readers, I ended up preferring the film to the book as the film is a lot more tightly woven and provides better motivations for the characters' actions.

The story, for those of you who don't know, centres on two Victorian magicians who strike up a feud and spend the next twenty years sabotaging each other's shows and trying to outperform each other, each coming up with a spectacular disapp...more
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Spectrum
bookshelves: booksyoucanborrow, reviewed
Read in September, 2007
recommends it for: people interested in magic or fans of the movie
SOMEONE IS BORROWING ME

"There is a kind of madness where delusion replaces reality, and many a kind of madness where delusions replaces reality, and many times such a malaise seemed to explain everything."

The Prestige is the story of two dueling magicians, Rupert Angier and Alfred Borden, living in Europe at the turn of the Twentieth Century. In a rather creative approach, the narrative is delivered through three different first person narratives. One narrative, told fr...more
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Chelsea
Read in June, 2007
Reading fiction involves a measure of belief-suspension, which I am more than willing to give - I would usually rather read something fictional than something factual. However, I don't much go in for mysteries, or fantasies, or science fiction or anything like that - in fact I have a pretty strong reaction to it and I'm not sure why. All I know is that it just makes me annoyed, like when Emily and Devon were having a discussion once about where they will go once time travel is invented and I h...more
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Ann
Ann rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
06/18/07

bookshelves: literatureandfilm
Read in June, 2007
Okay, I just finished today. Man. Well, the book is quite something- it is essentially told from four different points of view: Alfred Borden's, Rupert Angier's, Andrew Westley's (formerly Nikolas Borden, great-grandson of Alfred Borden), and Kate Angier's (great-granddaughter of Rupert Angier). For those of you who are not familiar with the story, it is essentially about a lifelong rivalry between two great magicians in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and their descendants trying to ...more
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Toughlove
Read in December, 2007
The Prestige by Christopher Priest is book about two battling magicians, who started off working together. It starts off, when Andrew Westley, real name. Andrew Borden was sent a note book, about his family. It tells, about secrets to all kinds of tricks. The book, is confusing, because it is not in a structured order, it goes from Andrew telling about him, to reading the journal, then back to his life, and then starts off at the part they already read. Andrew feels that he has a twin, but does ...more
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Azar
02/22/08

Read in February, 2008
recommends it for: anyone who likes fantasy, history, and suspense
A fabulous, engaging read that is absolutely deserving of the accolades it's earned. I read the book after seeing the movie, which is actually the order I recommend; while both are excellent--the film was the perfect way to tell the story as a film while the book was the perfect way to tell the story as a novel, IMO--I think the differences between the two were much less jarring the way I did it than they would have been had I read the book first. Because they did have to make some significant c...more
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Poorfish
bookshelves: fiction
Read in September, 2007
recommends it for: people that liked the movie
This is one of those rare cases where the movie was so much better than the book. The Prestige was an enjoyable read but seemed to be missing that 'magically' feel that the film pulled off so well. The author even tried to sculpt the narrative in such a way as to hint at a prestige of his own but never does pull it off in the same way that the film did. Strangely (or unnecessarily), the book is a lot grander in scope, it is bookended by the present day, centering on the descents of the tw...more
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Jordan
Jordan rated it: 2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars
06/25/07

bookshelves: literature
Read in November, 2006
This is the only book I can think of that I liked less than the movie. Much less.
I genuinely liked the plot, but the execution made such a lopsided, wandering mess of the story that it had no tension, no drama and no payoff. There were moments that kept me interested, but they were too few and far between. Upon finishing, it actually made me much less excited to see the film.
So when it finally came to DVD, I expected to be let down. But it was great! The movie boiled the characte...more
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Audra
Audra rated it: 5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars
10/31/07

Read in October, 2007
recommends it for: anyone who enjoys mysteries with a touch of magic, science fiction, and bit of soft horror too.
A suspenseful and gripping story, Christopher Priest demonstrates his storytelling skill in this compelling tale of two turn-of-the-century competing British stage magicians and their feud that trickles down through their descendants. A present day young man unexepctedly finds out that he is a descendant of one of the magicians, and the reader follows his journey of reading their old diaries, learning of their lives, secrets, the feud, and how it so directly affects him (the present day young ma...more
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David
07/25/08

Read in January, 1995
Another in the short list of books where the film adaptation is as good, but in a sufficiently different way.
I heard Chris Priest read the first chapter (well, it was then - it wasn't by the time the book appeared!) at an SF convention, and spent six months anxiously awaiting the final book. It didn't let me down. A clever narrative that plays with point of view and the art of illusion - the way some secrets are presented out in the open but you don't see what is right in front of your eyes ...more
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Ryan
Ryan added it
03/31/08

Basically, I ran out and picked this book up as quickly as I could after watching the excellent film by Christopher Nolan. Of course, having seen the film spoiled the ending for me a bit, although knowing the ending allowed me to enjoy the ride for what it was, rather than trying to figure out what the secret of the film was.[return]The basic plot: two Victorian-era magicians from differing backgrounds feud, and become obsessed with being better than each other, regardless of the personal cost....more
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Stephanie A.
Stephanie A. rated it: 3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars
06/04/08

Read in June, 2008
I LOVED the movie for this. It's unpleasant and a bit paradoxical but brilliant. I'd been meaning to read the book for a while as I normally enjoy reading books after watching the movies based on them. But beyond themes and characters, the novel has very little in common with the movie. All four of the narrators (five, including the weird few pages told in a stilted third person) sound the same regardless of the gaps of time and gender. In real-time, the descendants of Borden and Angier don't ap...more
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Jenny
12/11/07

Has a copy to sell/swap — Read in December, 2007
I read this book after having seen the movie. I was startled to find how different the book is from the plot of the movie...to the point where I wondered how they even developed the movie at all.

I wasn't quite sure whether to rate the book 3 or 4 stars. I'd say I give it a firm 3.5 stars, but am rounding up to 4.

(the rest of this might be spoiler-ish)

I liked how the book involved multiple generations and told the story from multiple viewpoints, but found it to be a little confu...more
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Russ
Russ rated it: 5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars
07/13/07

bookshelves: 2007, fantasy, favoritebooks, novel, thriller
Read in April, 2007
recommends it for: Anyone looking for something interesting
You know the kind of book that starts out very wordy and slow, and then *boom* you get a scene that makes you want to read the rest of it right now, just to find out what happens? This is that kind of book.

The setting is in present day, with descendants of two famous magicians trying to figure out what happened to their great-grandfathers. They do this by reading the journals/books of their forefathers. What they find out will really amaze you.

This book will keep you guessing, and onc...more
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Will
06/28/08

Very good and very different from the movie.

I'm not sure I would have been as engaged in the book if I'd not seen th movie first, but having seen the movie, I found the book to be riveting. The general plot is the same, but there are huge differences in how the story plays out and when the reader/viewer finds out key information.
There are two modern day characters introduced in the beginning that find a book and diary which contain the main plot. These two end up being very minor characte...more
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Mishqueen
Read in October, 2007
This is a situation where I saw the movie first, and then read the book. The two are quite different in a lot of aspects. The similarities are: two rival magicians, one has a transported man act that the other wants to discover the secret to, the other has a transported man act rooted in science instead of illusion. But that's about where the similarities stop. It was very interesting to experience the two so close to each other, while the movie was still so fresh in my mind. The book tell...more
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Dave
04/28/08

bookshelves: fiction-read
Read in April, 2008
recommends it for: fans of mysteries, psychological thrillers and philosophical fiction
Since I enjoy mixed or cross-genre literature (and music) I found this novel quite intriguing. I quite literally had difficulty putting it down. It combines elements mystery, fantasy, science fiction and psychological thriller. The use of multiple points of view led me to consider the subjective view of reality every person holds and how the same events can be construed quite differently. Another theme is misunderstanding, anger and the irrational urge for revenge for perceived disrespect or ot...more
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Dorothy
bookshelves: wicked-awesome
This was a really good book. Mostly a story for sheer entertainment, Priest's characters are real and they have depth which lends them to the literary and gives the book weight, allowing it to say something about it's characters and the human condition. I would suggest not bothering to watch the movie, but if you do, watch it after you read the book. The movie strays from the book and changes some of the story's basic foundations and facts. The events that begin the movie are different from the ...more
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Neal
07/02/08

I had been waiting over a year to finally read this book (it's been very popular at the library) and feel very underwhelmed. The story is told from multiple perspectives, and while I liked the concept of dueling Victorian-era magicians, the multiple p.o.v. style really slowed down the story for me. From time to time hearing the same story from the other magician's perspective added a huge twist, for the most point it felt like a waste of time and repetitive. I was also underwhelmed by the explan...more
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Hannah
07/28/08

Read in July, 2008
This is the kind of book that is more impressive in concept than in execution. What I mean is, the writing wasn't particularly engaging but the plot and its construction were thoroughly captivating. I saw the movie prior to reading the book -- now that I've finished the latter, I would really like to shake the hand of the screenwriter. He managed to retain all of the essential qualities of the novel, but distill them so they became more compelling and dramatic.

Worth reading for its gothic cr...more
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book data (includes all editions)

avg rating (all editions): 3.76 (873 ratings)
avg rating (this edition): 3.62 (105 ratings)
number of reviews: 202






other editions

The Prestige (Paperback)
The Prestige (Gollancz)
The Prestige (Hardcover)