The Book of Air and Shadows
by Michael GruberSign in to Goodreads to see your friends' reviews of this book.
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This was the most disappointing book I read this year. It was, however, the best marketed book I've read.
How could I resist this book? I teach Shakespeare, I love writing, I live in the year 2008, so a book that is set in the contemporary world that explores the (possible) discovery of a lost Shakespeare play was absolutely intriguing to me.
Unfortunately, I felt the writing -- the actual prose -- of the novel suffered for its pedestrian qualities. Nothing was intriguing about how the book wa...more
How could I resist this book? I teach Shakespeare, I love writing, I live in the year 2008, so a book that is set in the contemporary world that explores the (possible) discovery of a lost Shakespeare play was absolutely intriguing to me.
Unfortunately, I felt the writing -- the actual prose -- of the novel suffered for its pedestrian qualities. Nothing was intriguing about how the book wa...more
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8 comments
Has a copy to sell/swap
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Read in September, 2008
I picked up the "Book of Air and Shadows" as I found a newspaper clipping from a Dutch newspaper comapring this book to the 'Davinci Code' and similar books; mixing some facts about Shakespeare's life with fiction and turning it into "a fast paced page-turner" by an author who spent most of his career ghost-writing for other, well-known but unnamed authors.
The book is written in an interesting writing style, mixing the usual 3rd person narrative with letters from the 17th...more
The book is written in an interesting writing style, mixing the usual 3rd person narrative with letters from the 17th...more
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bookshelves:
literary-fiction
recommends it for: Fans of Dan Brown's work (it's a challenge but worth it)
Read in March, 2007
recommended to Brittany by:
Myselfrecommends it for: Fans of Dan Brown's work (it's a challenge but worth it)
How I Came To Read This Book: Harper Collins sent me a free advanced reader's edition.
The Plot: Jake Mishkin (in first-person), a lonely divorcee copyright lawyer, and Al Crosetti (in third-person), a lonely self-involved aspiring screenwriter, make up the two halves of the dynamic duo that stars in this book. A cross between your everyday piece of literary fiction and a Da Vince Code-esque plot, the book centres on a purportedly lost (but fully real) Shakesperian handwritten manuscript - an...more
The Plot: Jake Mishkin (in first-person), a lonely divorcee copyright lawyer, and Al Crosetti (in third-person), a lonely self-involved aspiring screenwriter, make up the two halves of the dynamic duo that stars in this book. A cross between your everyday piece of literary fiction and a Da Vince Code-esque plot, the book centres on a purportedly lost (but fully real) Shakesperian handwritten manuscript - an...more
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Read in July, 2008
Once bitten by the literary thriller via Umberto Eco’s "Name of the Rose" and "Foucault’s Pendulum" back in the early 90s, I’ve had an on-again off-again love affair with the genre. More “off” than “on” due to my high expectations a la Eco. While being a ripping page-turner than had “Screenplay!” written all over it when I read it years before it was a movie, "The Da Vinci Code" lacked a certain je ne sais quoi. (Okay, that sounds a little too snob...more
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bookshelves:
read---fiction
Read in June, 2008
Shakespeare, Russian gangsters, cyphers, antique books, sex and the English Civil War - what's not to like?
Well, nothing really. Of course there wasn't much that I found that I actually liked either. Actually that's a bit unfair to The Book of Air and Shadows. It's not as if I was bored by the book, it just sat on my bedside table for two months, half finished and ignored in favor of other books. I always int...more
Well, nothing really. Of course there wasn't much that I found that I actually liked either. Actually that's a bit unfair to The Book of Air and Shadows. It's not as if I was bored by the book, it just sat on my bedside table for two months, half finished and ignored in favor of other books. I always int...more
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Read in August, 2008
a very enjoyable, but deeply flawed book...
flawed, because the gratuitous and largely pointless sexual content of this book almost causes it to founder...as a matter of fact, if you look at the majority of the reviews here and on amazon, many a reader could not get past it...
enjoyable, because the erudition and imagination that went into its creation are absolutely superlative...
the literary treasure hunt of the main characters and the prize itself are both filled with intellectual veris...more
flawed, because the gratuitous and largely pointless sexual content of this book almost causes it to founder...as a matter of fact, if you look at the majority of the reviews here and on amazon, many a reader could not get past it...
enjoyable, because the erudition and imagination that went into its creation are absolutely superlative...
the literary treasure hunt of the main characters and the prize itself are both filled with intellectual veris...more
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19 comments
Read in October, 2007
It appears that all writers are fascinated with the genre of "what if" fiction and Michael Gruber is no exception. In the Book of Air & Shadows he asks the reader "What if a couple of modern day antiquarian bookstore employees (Albert Crosetti and Carolyn Rolly)accidently discover letters and cyphers purportedly written by an intimate of William Shakespeare alluding to the existance of a hidden Shakespeare play written in the Bards own hand? Building on this first what if, he ...more
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partially-read
Read in July, 2008
Just dragged myself through the first chapter and i'm already questioning whether i should continue reading. Its just not fascinating me. In addition i hate the writing style. For someone like me who loves proper punctuating, this guy uses a million commas, in all the right places, but still its driving me nuts.
OK! and thats the end of that. I just finished the third chapter and almost cried at the idea of venturing on to the fourth. The main narrator just rambles on page after page, comma a...more
OK! and thats the end of that. I just finished the third chapter and almost cried at the idea of venturing on to the fourth. The main narrator just rambles on page after page, comma a...more
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bookshelves:
fiction,
historical-fiction,
suspense
Read in July, 2008
recommends it for:
historical fiction & suspense fans, people who like Neal Stephenson's Baroque Cycle
The Book of Air and Shadows is quite the weighty tome, but its intriguing characters and intricately plotted revelations make it quite an engrossing read.
I enjoyed the rich cast of wonderfully flawed characters - no paragons of personality in this book. All of the characters appear to be a believable mix of noble and ignoble, which I think is a marker of books I enjoy. Hey - none of us are angels or demons, but we may behave like one or the other from time to time. ;)
I personall...more
I enjoyed the rich cast of wonderfully flawed characters - no paragons of personality in this book. All of the characters appear to be a believable mix of noble and ignoble, which I think is a marker of books I enjoy. Hey - none of us are angels or demons, but we may behave like one or the other from time to time. ;)
I personall...more
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Read in June, 2008
recommended to Julie by:
mobileread (forum)recommends it for: no-one
The book did not start well for me, but I found the storyline to be quite intriguing. Unfortunately, the book didn't get any better and eventually fell apart at about the halfway point. I stuck with it until I was more than 3/4th of the way through it when I decided I just couldn't take it anymore and stopped reading. I found the book to be tedious for several reasons:
1) I didn't care for the writing style
2) The story got very boring
3) There were too many gratuitous sexual encounters...more
1) I didn't care for the writing style
2) The story got very boring
3) There were too many gratuitous sexual encounters...more
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Read in January, 2008
A rather thrilling story about the discovery of a letter that proves not only Shakespeare's existence but also the existence of another, previously unknown, play. The best part of the book is how the author told the story from alternating viewpoints - one as events are happening and one from the first-person perspective of one of the characters. There is ALOT of back story about who these two main characters are as a way to explain why they do what they do, although I don't know that it is so co...more
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Read in December, 2007
recommends it for:
not many people
I usually try to give each book the first one hundred pages before deciding to quit. If it hasn't hooked me by then, it's doubtful it'll hook me any time soon. I gave this book the first forty pages and gave up. It's almost mind-numbingly boring. Written in first-person, so we know the narrator makes it through whatever it is that's coming up, there is no hook early on to make me want to keep reading. The narrator rambles on about things not connected to the main lost-manuscript-of-Shakespeare p...more
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3 comments
bookshelves:
mystery
Read in September, 2007
Jake Mishkin, whose seemingly innocent job as an intellectual property lawyer has put him at the center of a deadly conspiracy and a chase to find a priceless treasure involving William Shakespeare. The story involves a hectic chase that began when a fire in an antiquarian bookstore revealed the hiding place of letters containing a shocking secret, concealed for four hundred years. In a frantic race from New York to England and Switzerland, Jake finds himself matching wits with someone who seems...more
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Ostensibly, this book had all the elements for a fantastic read: a book about books (check), lost Shakespearean manuscript (check), murder (check), intrigue (check)....flashbacks to the past (check) etc. etc. However, all of the positives were really outweighed by the fact that I really dislike the way Gruber writes. When you write a book about books, the language should be poetic. The author's words should mesmerize you with their beauty, hooking you in and keeping you within their grasp. Unfor...more
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Julie:
All thrillers should be as smart, filled with compellingly flawed characters and as much fun as Mr. Gruber’s latest.
You can imagine the excitement of Albert Crosetti, an employee in a musty New York antiquarian bookstore, when he finds 17th century letters hinting at the existence of an undiscovered play by Shakespeare. Blindly in love with Carolyn Rolly, the store’s bookbinder, he succumbs to her charms and sells the letters to a Shakespearean scholar. Stupid, perhaps, but C...more
All thrillers should be as smart, filled with compellingly flawed characters and as much fun as Mr. Gruber’s latest.
You can imagine the excitement of Albert Crosetti, an employee in a musty New York antiquarian bookstore, when he finds 17th century letters hinting at the existence of an undiscovered play by Shakespeare. Blindly in love with Carolyn Rolly, the store’s bookbinder, he succumbs to her charms and sells the letters to a Shakespearean scholar. Stupid, perhaps, but C...more
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Read in January, 2008
I love a bibliophile book, and a book lovers mystery at that. I put off reading this for awhile cause everytime I read the description about a lost Shakespeare manuscript I just couldn't find myself with interest. But it keep coming around to my attention and finally I picked it up - and what an amazing read! I loved it! Several characters plot lines run simultaneously as letters, cyphers and links to a 17th century manuscript are found in the bindings of an old book. Anything Shakespeare i...more
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Read in April, 2008
Thoroughly enjoyed this "literary" thriller. At least that's how it was described on the dust jacket. Told from three different narrative points of view, one of which finishes, and the other two of which come together near the end. Very thoughtful, with a wide range of believable characters bouncing all kinds of interesting ideas off each other. A McGuffin that's easily as good as the DaVinci Code's, and the solving of a puzzle which, as long as you're in the book's thrall, is complet...more
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bookshelves:
mystery
Read in April, 2008
Were it not for a couple of flaws, I might have given this book 5 stars. I liked the premise and the way the plot was developed; there were a couple of surprises along the way, which is always nice. One enjoyable aspect of the book was the occasional acute observation on the part of the author. These were usually apropos of nothing; just an unexpected bonus that I found striking and something that makes the book more than a standard thriller. My principal complaints have to do with the clima...more
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Read in February, 2008
recommended to Kirby by:
No one.recommends it for: mystery fans.
In this book a lawyer is entrusted with some papers that end up to be a view of life at the time of Shakespeare and about the man Shakespeare. Almost nothing is known about Shakespeare making these papers extremely valuble. This part of the book is fascinating.
A downside for non-native speakers of English or those who hated Shakespeare in high school is that you have to like to wade through Shakespearean English in this book. In between the chapters the last words of a man who spied on S...more
A downside for non-native speakers of English or those who hated Shakespeare in high school is that you have to like to wade through Shakespearean English in this book. In between the chapters the last words of a man who spied on S...more
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Read in June, 2008
This was a long, riveting story told from three voices, one from the 17th century, the others present day. Jake Mishkin (intellectual property lawyer)has been retained by a Professor Bulstrode to help unearth the authenticity of a 17th century letter written by a Richard Bracegirdle, purporting to reveal an as unyet found play by Shakespeare. At the same time, bookstore worker Albert Crossetti is telling his story of finding said letter and mysterious notes in cipher from the 17th century, that...more
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