Winter's Tale
Published May 10, 2003
(More reposting of old reviews. This one is from early 2001.)
Winter's Tale by Mark Helprin. I've had this recommended to me several times over the years, but I'd never actually picked it up to read it until a few months back when Kate insisted I try it. I think I had conflated it with Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale (which I really don't want to read) in my mind, a tragic case of being kept from a good book by virtue of a superifical similarity to the title of a shrill one.
What a wonderfully written book this is. If only I had the foggiest idea what it was about...
OK, that's not quite true. It appears to be about a lot of things: love, loss, time, winter, magic (subtle and otherwise). It's a love song to New York City, and a story of an attempt to storm the gates of Heaven. It's a story of the passing of an era, and the birth of a new age.It's all of those things and more, it's just not very clear about which of those it really wants to be in its heart of hearts.
Which is forgivable, for the sake of the writing:
The horse could not do without Manhattan. It drew him like a magnet, like a vacuum, like oats, or a mare, or an open, never-ending, tree-lined road. He came off the bridge ramp and stopped short. A thousand streets lay before him, silent but for the sound of the gemlike wind. Driven with snow, white, and empty, they were a maze for his delight as the newly arisen wind whistled across still untouched drifts and rills. He passed empty theaters, countinghouses, and forested wharves where the snow-lined spars looked like long black groves of pine. He passed dark factories and deserted parks, and rows of little houses where wood just fired filled the air with sweet reassurance.... But he kept away from the markets, because there it was noontime even at dawn, and he followed the silent tributaries of the mains streets, passing the exposed steelwork of buildings in the intermission of feverish construction. And he was seldom out of sight of the new bridgesm which had married beautiful womanly Brooklyn to her rish uncle, Manhattan; had put the city's hand out to the country; and were the end of the past because they spanned not only distance and deep water, but also dreams and time."
Lengthy descriptive passges in this vein abound (and I do mean "lengthy"-- I elided four or five sentences of things that the horse passed...), and would probably be susceptible to parody (they dance along the sheer cliffs above the drop into self-parody) if they weren't so much fun to read. This is a book by a man drunk on words, and the intoxicating quality carries through to the reader.
The plot, on the other hand, is a bit diifcult to make any sense of. It starts out looking like something of a crime story, then changes into a love story, then the two lovers drop out of the tale entirely for a hundred and fifty-odd pages (you can tell Helprin isn't really a genre author-- if he was, he'd've stopped there, and called it the first book of a trilogy...), at which point one of them resurfaces. In the interim, the book has ceased to be a straightforward story about love and loss in an alternate New York, but has turned into a story about the end of an era, and the dawn of a new age. Or something.
- Winter's Tale
- Published: May 10, 2003
- Type:
- Section: Books
- Filed Under: Books: Fantasy, Books: Literature and Fiction, Books: SF
- Writer: Chad Orzel
- Chad Orzel's BC Writer page
- Chad Orzel's personal site
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What a wonderfully written book this is. If only I had the foggiest idea what it was about...
ha haaa. That line is classic. I'll have to try and squeeze it whenever it's appropriate. :)
Your review, in a good way, perfectly showed the confusion it put in your brain.