Rating: Not rated
Tags: Fantasy, Hugo Award, Lang:en
Summary
Gilbert Norrell is determined to single-handedly
rehabilitate his sanitised and patriotic version of English
magic, which has suffered a post-Enlightenment neglect after
a richly dark history. He ruthlessly secures his place as
England’s only magician in two marvellously drawn
feats. First, he brings the statutes of York Cathedral to
life and then, to facilitate his entry into London society,
he brings a young bride-to-be back from the dead - a feat
with terrible consequences. However, another more naturally
gifted magician — Jonathan Strange — emerges to
become his pupil and later his rival. Strange becomes
increasingly obsessed with the Raven King — the
medieval lord-magician of the North of England and pursues
his desire to recruit a fairy servant to the edge of madness.
Whilst the differing characters of Norrell and Strange give
the book a central human conflict, it is the tension between
the dual natures of civilised and wilder magic that lends it
a metaphysical texture that shades the narrative with
wonderful and troubling descriptions of ships made of rain,
paths between mirrors and faerie roads leading out of England
to a bleak yet dazzling realm. Fortunately, the precision of
her storytelling never reigns in Clarke’s prodigious
imagination.
2005 Hugo Award