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121 ratings, 3.93 average rating, 20 reviews
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published
2001
by Broadway
binding
Hardcover, 368 pages
isbn
0767902815
(isbn13: 9780767902816)
description
Unlike many a novelist, Chris Adrian isn't intimidated by history. Indeed, he treats historical events as raw material, to be reshaped and reconfigure...more
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 194)
Read in October, 2007
A book that sits ambiguously between epic, lyric, and science fiction. Though it's light on the science, often invoking magic as a deus ex machina, it is actually quite heavy on the medicine practices and beliefs of the era.
Grief is the theme that binds all the major characters of this story, tho each one's grief is different and taken on different effects. Interestingly enough, Chris Adrian wrote this out of his own grief for his brother's death. For all its history, its fantasy, and its path...more
Grief is the theme that binds all the major characters of this story, tho each one's grief is different and taken on different effects. Interestingly enough, Chris Adrian wrote this out of his own grief for his brother's death. For all its history, its fantasy, and its path...more
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Read in September, 2008
Gob’s Grief explores the personal side of post American Civil War grief and anguish. The plot is pretty simple. With the help of three of his friends (one of them being Walt Whitman) Gob builds a machine that will bring back the Civil War dead.
It took me a while to get into this book. It didn’t pull me in from the start, but after a while, after I let this book sit in my mind for several days, its main themes began to really resonate, and by the time I finished I loved this novel.
Th...more
It took me a while to get into this book. It didn’t pull me in from the start, but after a while, after I let this book sit in my mind for several days, its main themes began to really resonate, and by the time I finished I loved this novel.
Th...more
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Read in September, 2008
recommended to Velcro by:
hubcap
Engrossing--Adrian plays with time in a very convincing way. Follows a tight-knit plot (lots of scene, very little summary, close 3rd POV with much internal monologue) for a short period of time (a few years), and ends this first hundred pages with a dramatic crisis. Then he switches POVs, goes decades back in the past, and jumps from scene to scene, ending years before the initial crisis. This portion is shorter, but the next one is even shorter yet. It follows yet another character for a few y...more
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Has a copy to sell/swap
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Read in June, 2008
I'd picked this surprising little gem of a first novel during my obsession with first books. In Adrian's case, I chose to jump over THE CHILDREN'S HOSPITAL to try on his first book, and I'm glad I did. in three parts, the novel revolves around Gob's constructing a machine to bring back those who died during the Civil War, his brother Tomo in particular. The three parts focus on three different characters whom, while skeptical about Gob's implausible creation, find hope in the outside chance the ...more
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Talking about my reactions to Gob's Grief would probably be about as difficult to talk about if I tried to review a book that, well, really I'm going to have to review also now called Weiland, or the Transformation and Memoirs of Carwin the Biloquist. For Weiland, it was one of the first books I had read in a long, long time that just struck a chord in me at times where there passages and thoughts expressed that were so chillingly like certain perspectives of my own that I often find difficulty...more
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I'd read <b>The Children's Hospital<b> first. Just a suggestion.
Adrian's actual writing is always pretty good, but has moments of brilliance. He totally understands the threshold of - and how to lure the reader into - a stasis in pacing, and what a quick pull out of said state can do. Example: In <b>Gob's Grief<b> there is a section about how some power plant pollution killed the wildlife while making the sunset more vivid or something; not suicide-boring, but certai...more
Adrian's actual writing is always pretty good, but has moments of brilliance. He totally understands the threshold of - and how to lure the reader into - a stasis in pacing, and what a quick pull out of said state can do. Example: In <b>Gob's Grief<b> there is a section about how some power plant pollution killed the wildlife while making the sunset more vivid or something; not suicide-boring, but certai...more
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Read in October, 2007
Not nearly as wonderful as Children's Hospital, but still quite good. For awhile I thought this was going to be a five star book, but the bottom sort of dropped out of it towards the end, but not in too major of a way. This book really needs to have a new blurb written on it, and maybe the cover changed (especially on the paperback), since making this book seem like a Civil War novel is like saying that Gravity's Rainbow is about World War 2. Actually the Pynchon book is so much...more
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After finishing this, I felt like this is the book I've been looking for all my life, like it was fate giving it to me to read. Bringing together heart aching ideas on the desire of life and the very human confusion of death, against a beautiful tapestry of American spirituality in all its forms. This book called to my childhood, for very personal reasons, in its speaking of brotherhood, and in my memories of many weekend trips to Civil War battlefields, and then called to my current self, as an...more
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Read in August, 2008
["Sweet, sweet forgiveness!" Anna Claflin shouted at the other end of the room. Engrossed in her work, Maci didn't notice how the old lady was sneaking up on her. She'd smeared her lips with honey, and meant to give Maci a sugar-kiss. Maci looked up too late to duck away. But young Dr. Woodhull's hand came between them before Anna's lips could connect with Maci's. Anna kissed his hand lovingly, then went back to the other end of the table. She took a knife and began to stab at Colonel ...more
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Read in July, 2007
This is a very different kind of book. It starts out during the Civil War and focuses on the lives of several people who all suffered the loss of brothers in the War. These characters become involved in the occult, some unwillingly, in spiritism, and seek to bring the war dead back to life. The dead instruct the living in the making of a machine built for that purpose. It also involves real people, e.g. Walt Whitman and Victoria Woodhull and creates a great deal of fiction in their lives. The...more
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Read in October, 2007
recommends it for:
Civil War reinactors and Chris Scott
I am unendingly excited that writers of my generation are doing this fantasy-play magic/scary fucking w/history thing.
If anybody else is interested in this, please holler.
This book will bowl you over, especially those of you living in DC. The highlight of the book (spolier!) Walt Whitman and his lover get drunk and sneak into the White House, only to steal Abraham Lincoln's hat.
The lover then wears the hat while trying to build a machine to unite the world of the living with the wor...more
If anybody else is interested in this, please holler.
This book will bowl you over, especially those of you living in DC. The highlight of the book (spolier!) Walt Whitman and his lover get drunk and sneak into the White House, only to steal Abraham Lincoln's hat.
The lover then wears the hat while trying to build a machine to unite the world of the living with the wor...more
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Read in January, 2007
Contrary to what I was led to believe, this is not a book about a man building a time machine during the civil war era. Sure, the story takes place during and (mostly) after the civil war, but the goal of the machine is much loftier than mere time travel. Similarly, the themes and goals of the novel were much larger than I expected.
Oh, and if you've read the Children's Hospital and not this one, there's something in here you might especially like, but I won't say what.
Oh, and if you've read the Children's Hospital and not this one, there's something in here you might especially like, but I won't say what.
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I stumbled across this book after reading a review of the author's newest book. It is amazing. Now everyone knows I'm a little on the obsessed side of Civil War....combine that with a creepy creepy storyline of raising the dead and well hell it was just so good. The themes around grief brought to mind Drew Gilpin Faust's non-fiction book around death and dying and how it changed in America after the war wiped out 600,000 individuals
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Read in July, 2007
recommends it for:
Hard call.
Pushed my way through this book, I love his language and am intrigued by his ideas and what is in his head, but I wanted more from this story then it was willing to give me. I felt like he had a lot of secrets that he didn't want to share with the reader.
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This book broke my heart about thirty times before it was finished. A beautiful fantastical take on the intellectual life of the 19th century, the civil war, and just who belongs where among the living and the dead.
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Read in September, 2008
This is beautiful and I love Chris Adrian for writing it. Death usually defies examination for those whoa are broken hearted, but he makes a valiant go of it.
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People friggin hated this book! I loved it. A little repetitive, but there are some amazing bits with magic, real magic.
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Read in June, 2007
steamed mussels in lemon ginger broth with large chunks of vine-ripened tomatoes, beans, and dates.
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Read in February, 2008
Chris Adrian needs to write more. He does repression almost as well as Ishiguro.
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Put this on hold as well. Thought I should give Adrian another try.
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