Year of Wonders
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Year of Wonders

3.91 of 5 stars 3.91  ·  rating details  ·  27,644 ratings  ·  3,716 reviews
Unabridged CDs, 11 CDs, 9 hours

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In 1666, a young woman comes of age during an extraordinary year of love and death.
Compact Disc, 1 pages
Published August 5th 2010 by Penguin Group (USA) Incorporated (first published January 1st 2001)
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JanB
I would have given this a higher rating if not for the strange ending.
Meredith Enos
A lot of people have complained about this book being slow, but I found it beautifully paced for what it was about--after all, the title is "Year of Wonders," which kind of sets up an expectation and timeframe right away. The pace helped set up a world, a time when things moved more slowly, when people were more thoughtful, when people paid attention to the seasons and nature. This is a beautifully narrated, incredibly seamless (for the amount of research that must have been put into ...more
Francine
I had read a couple of Geraldine Brooks' essays for my Lit Theory class while I was in grad school, and while I was never one of those ultra-feminist types, I liked what she wrote about women as being strong, independent and intelligent creatures without overtly politicizing femininity as a whole. So I looked forward to reading "Year of Wonders", primarily because I loved the topic, I loved the time period, I loved the location and because I thought Brooks would be able to impart some...more
Judith
I enjoyed this a lot, but with some reservations. First of all, I knew the basic story very well from Jill Paton Walsh's wonderful children's novel "A Parcel of Patterns", so in a way, I didn't feel I was coming fresh to the book.

Secondly, I felt the narrator was a bit of a Mary Sue, in that she seemed to me--a rabid historical fiction fan as a teenager--to be an idealised version of what we think we'd like to have been like if we'd lived in the past. Maybe that's unfair o...more
Hannah
Rarely has a book so captivated and then disappointed me with such a 180 turn to what I called utter "dreckage". Year of Wonders managed to do this, infortunately.

In order to review, I have to break the book up between pages so that you can see where the trainwreck happened for me, and why I'm so PO'ed I could almost cry....

REVIEW FOR PAGES 1-255
Rating: 5 stars
(I'd give it 10 stars if Goodreads had that designation, but since 5 stars means it was amazing...more
Rebecca
Rebecca rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: people who like historical fiction.
Recommended to Rebecca by: LisaMM
Year of Wonders is a historical novel about a small English town 100 miles outside of London. It's the year 1666, and the town has been struck by plague, brought to them by a London tailor boarding with our narrator, Anna. The village is so remote that when the plague first appears the villagers don't recognize it for what it is. Once they learn the horrors of the disease, the villagers are asked to make a decision whether to flee in order to save themselves, or to stay put in order to keep the ...more
Gina
Ah me, I'm afraid I had to reach for the smelling salts many times during Brooks' depiction of the plague's rampage through a small village in central England in the year 1666. The village and it's heroic decision to isolate itself to prevent the spread of the Black Death to other parts of the country is a reality. The characters spring to full-blown life from the author's imagination: preachers, servant girls, noble people who take on the roles of "heavies", Puritans, Anglicans,...more
Amy
***SPOILER ALERT******

Year of Wonders is a novel inspired by the true story of the little town of Eyam in Derbyshire, known as the Plague Village, during the years 1665 - 1666. Although the cause of how the plague showed up in their village is still unknown, the villagers' decision to quarantine themselves in order to stop the spread of the deadly disease has sealed their place in history.

Geraldine Brooks provides us with a fictional account of what life looked like fro...more
Laura
Laura rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to Laura by: Kathryn Latour
1666. A young housemaid walks through the empty streets of a village decimated by plague. She attends to the rector, a formerly charismatic leader now sequestered in his empty house, listless and faithless. The previous year a bolt of fabric from London brought bubonic plague to this remote northern village, and as one by one the villagers began to die, the rector convinced them that instead of fleeing the village and bringing plague to others (who probably would drive them away anyway), they s...more
Amy
After reading March, I had to immediately read this novel by the same author. It's the story about the plague hitting a small village in England and how the people in the small town change as a result of it. I've been fascinated with historical fictions about plagues since reading Connie Willis' Doomsday Book. I still think I enjoyed Doomsday Book a bit more, but they are, after all, two entirely different stories.

I found it interesting how this particular plague tale focuses on a r...more
Melissa
I enjoyed this book. The characters were interesting and I liked the narrator, Anna. The book is loosely based on actual events: there was an entire village that willingly quarantined itself during the plague so its members would not carry the disease to other villages. It's a facinating premise and Brooks shows us the best and worst of people living with a self-imposed death sentece. I enjoyed reading the book through Anna's perspective. She was not formally educated, but smart and insight...more
Stephany fisher
Stephany fisher rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: historical fiction lovers
The Year of Wonders by Geraldine Brooks - Recommended
I really enjoyed this book. It is an interesting mix of historical and feminist fiction that brings to mind The Red Tent, or The Instance of the Fingerpost. The book is about the plague in a village near London in the years 1665-1666. One of the most fascinating aspects of this book is that it presents the ending (or almost the ending) at the beginning of the book, and yet still evokes tremendous suspense. I was hungrily compelled to rea...more
Lois
Wow this book is SO good. I kept NOT reading it, knowing it was one of those "how I survived the plague when others around me fell" books.....and you definitely have to be in the right state of mind for that.
Well, I'm actually listening to this on CD, and the narrator is fantastic and the story is one I have to tear myself away from. Possibly a tiny bit of contemporary sensibility transplanted onto the young widowed protagonist, but not enough to be distracting, and probably j...more
ShaRose
ShaRose rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: adult readers
Recommended to ShaRose by: local library pick
Shelves: favorites
Just about my favorite read book to date! It took me around 30 pages to get in to a groove because I was about to quit it after several restarts. Written in an Old English style that takes getting used to, though well worth it, this is the most eloquently beautiful book I have ever read, as if the language is well-oiled. The story is set in the 1600's during the time of the Plague, and not a book one might think of as lovely under these circumstances and yet, it is a fascinating weave of events ...more
Christine
Despite the vast majority of this story being a seemingly unending tide of death and devastation from the Plague, I absolutely loved this novel. Granted I'm kind of a sucker for a historical novel set in a small seventeenth century British village with medical themes and an empowered female protagonist, but this story did an excellent job of combining period details, developing compelling characters, and showing a community in an impossible situation. I liked the end, though I'll admit it was aw...more
Ron
Wonderful evocation to a time far enough from our own as to seem like a fantasy. Excellent characters and plot, based on true events.

Marred only by the heroine's preternatural wisdom (it is fiction) and the inane, un-historical Epilogue, but even that is not enough to deflect my recommendation. Read and enjoy.
Jessica
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Heather
I officially love Geraldine Brooks! This book is slim, but powerful in its imagery and emotional heft. My favorite similarity with People of the Book is the way they both feature gentle and life-loving females taking the joys and pains of life as they come, but they are neither passionate silly women, nor calm schemers or intellectuals, nor shining heroines who can do no wrong and are always brave.

Anna is depicted as a real person, who has made tough decisions (some which she regret...more
Ann Canann
A terrific novel of ordinary people in an extraordinary time. Brooks is a gifted story teller with riveting observations of everyday things and period detail. She brings an amazing 17th century historical event to life in a story of how one village heroically faced the black-death. A wonderful read, my favorite by Brooks.

Daughter (Tania Lyon) put "Year of Wonder" in her to-read list.

Daughter (Kristin Stangl) responded: "Don't be fooled by the heroism-in-bad-...more
Graham
A friend of mine lent me this book accompanied by her hearty recommendation. I confess it sat, unread on my desk, for a number of months while I caught up on my TBR pile, but at last I finally got around to checking it out. I’d completed it within a few days.

It’s a fabulous historical novel. I wish ALL historical novels were like this. Everything is spot on: the attention to detail is perfect, the pacing just right, the writing style readable and intelligent. Best of all is the autho...more
Becky
This was a very interesting book. I really enjoy historical fiction. I love to read about how people lived before the invention of the internet, or the car, or the cotton gin, or whatever the case may be.

This was a short book, at just over 300 pages, but it didn't feel short. The characters were well-developed, the pacing of the story was just right, and it kept me entertained from start to finish. I really enjoyed seeing how the people in the village reacted to the deaths all arou...more
Bernadette
Bernadette rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: Everyone
Year of Wonders tells the story of Anna, a young, widowed servant living in an English village in which the Plague is rampant in 1666. The village voluntarily isolates itself completely in the hopes that others will not be infected with the terrible disease and Anna and her employers, the Rector and his wife, help the villagers through the terrible year as best they can.

It is one of the most beautifully written stories I have read. Brooks' descriptions are so vivid and contain just t...more
Katy
I have to say that I liked this book. But, I was greatly disappointed in it. I came to the book knowing of the sacrifice of that village and knowing, too, that when people sacrifice in such a way they are abundantly blessed by God. Unfortunately, the latter was completely missing in this book. It is easy to be an onlooker to suffering and assume that you’ve seen the injustice and the loss and the pain and that there is nothing else to see. This is not only completely at odds with everything...more
Leila
Brooks' prose is lyrical, absolutely beautiful, and her account of a plague village in England is fascinating, gruesome, heart-rending, and inspiring by turns. But the end--argh! This is one of the most dissatisfying endings I think I've ever read. I really don't have a problem with the idea of feminism in historical novels. The fact that it didn't have a NAME, the fact that it wasn't commonly understood that women were the equals of men in so many ways, does not necessarily mean that it never o...more
Jeanette
Another winner from this author! An engaging plot and an interesting glimpse of what life was like for country people back then.
Historical novels are the perfect niche for Geraldine Brooks. She does ample research, then creates a perfect blend of fact and fiction.

This book is based on a true story about the village of Eyam, Derbyshire, where they really did quarantine themselves during the Black Plague of the 17th century. People long ago didn't understand how disease was tran...more
Roisin
Roisin rated it 1 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: no one
I have to admit that I have never been a huge fan of historical fiction so this is not the kind of book that I would normally read. Having read several positive reviews and been impressed by the author's credentials, however, I started reading with an open mind. The writing style was very welcoming and drew you in from the beginning and I warmed to the strength of Anna, the protagonist. I felt however that the story became so flawed and was so inconsistently paced that by the final page I had lo...more
Callie
Callie Clifton
Mrs. Ebarvia
Honors World Literature
November 29, 2007
Online Book Review
Year of Wonders by Geraldine Brooks is both an entertaining and unbelievably realistic novel about England during the Black Plague. Geraldine Brooks has received critical acclaim for her other novels, including March, Foreign Correspondence, and Nine Parts of Desire. Brooks, originally from Sydney, Australia, has attended both the University of Sydney and Columbia University. Year o...more
Monica
Monica rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to Monica by: Susan Millar
I've owned a copy of Year of Wonders book for a few years, and, though the cover was beautiful, never picked it up until something prompted me, the long winter, I don't know but thought, "what the hell, it's not too long" and decided to give it a go since goodreads keeps me motivated and I respect the lady who told me about it. The story drew me in fairly quickly. I wanted to keep reading but wasn't especially eager, just interested, and felt no strong compulsion to continue without s...more
Beth
In a Year of Wonders, Geraldine Brooks portrays a small town in England during the year 1666 - The Plague Year. Anna Frith, a local woman in town who works at the rectory takes on a traveling tailor as a border. When her border dies of the plague the town makes the decision to stay isolated as opposed to spreading the seeds of the plague all over England by fleeing. This is the story of Anna and her town as they discover themselves, community, strength, love, courage and friendship in the face o...more
Emily
Really beautiful. Part story of survival, part small-town living, part tale about a woman finding her own strength, this book was truly beautiful. Set in 1666, the novel tracks a year in the life of one small town that was infected with the plague. Deciding to shut themselves off from their neighboring villages so as not to infect them, the town ends up turning within, seeking both strength and answers. The story is told through the eyes of a woman who loses her husband and two sons, and the...more
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Year of Wonders (Paperback)
Year of Wonders: A Novel of the Plague (Hardcover)
Year of Wonders (Paperback)
Year of Wonders (Kindle Edition)
Year of Wonders (ebook)

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Geraldine Brooks (born 1955) is an Pulitzer Prize-winning, Australian-American journalist and author.

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“God warns us not to love any earthly thing above Himself, and yet He sets in a mother's heart such a fierce passion for her babes that I do not comprehend how He can test us so.” 22 people liked it
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