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⋙ [PDF] Free Salamander edition by Thomas Wharton Literature Fiction eBooks

Salamander edition by Thomas Wharton Literature Fiction eBooks



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Download PDF Salamander  edition by Thomas Wharton Literature  Fiction eBooks

Spellbinding, original, Salamander careens through a world of ideas and stories in which the transforming power of books, the thirst for knowledge, and the pursuit of immortality become erotic. It is also a universal story of love and obsession. Set in the eighteenth century, the narrative revolves around a world-spanning quest for the infinite book. Along the way the novel gathers stories that range from a Chinese tale of jealousy and lost love to the remarkable history of Alexandria’s other great library and to epoch-making moments on the battlefields of colonial America. At the centre of the novel’s unforgettable cast of characters is the London printer Nicholas Flood, a dedicated craftsman who is unprepared for all that awaits him when he accepts an unusual commission. Intricate, humane, infused with humour and pathos, Salamander is an exhilarating, elegantly crafted novel.


From the Hardcover edition.

Salamander edition by Thomas Wharton Literature Fiction eBooks

Fabulous book, one of my childhood favourites that I was delighted to track down again. But DO NOT BUY THE KINDLE EDITION! The formatting is completely messed up. Go with the paperback edition and enjoy a really beautiful book about books.

Product details

  • File Size 3472 KB
  • Print Length 386 pages
  • Publisher Emblem Editions (November 5, 2010)
  • Publication Date November 5, 2010
  • Sold by  Digital Services LLC
  • Language English
  • ASIN B004BA5DHU

Read Salamander  edition by Thomas Wharton Literature  Fiction eBooks

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Salamander edition by Thomas Wharton Literature Fiction eBooks Reviews


A very touching story that will capture you emotionally. At the end, you will understand that madness and love are not so different after all!
This novel, the author's second effort, is a complex, romantic and fascinating fable. While focused on the manufactured puzzles of printers, automata-makers and the like, the book's early eighteenth century characters manuever through the puzzles of their lives. From Hungary to Venice, Alexandria and farther afield, Salamander is a puzzle unto itself, that rewards the reader with good writing, big ideas and strong narrative.
The first chapters of the book are very promising and involving because they don't reveal too much. That's good to begin with but once you keep on reading and realize that THIS is the style of the entire book, you're gonna wish you would have spent your reading time with a better book.
I finished reading because I am a completist. Otherwise I would have stopped half way, where I started to lose interest.
There are too many stories and too many complex characters that don't get the time they should have to make the story whole. Interesting premise but not satisfying at all.
Oh how I would love to enter the castle in Salamander! What a strange place, you wake up in a different room than you went to sleep in, walls move and change.
A book creater is hired to create a book like no other for a count during the 1700's. The problem begins when Flood, the book creator falls in love with the counts daughter.
A engaging mystery with love and a bit of the fantastic sprinkled in. A dalightful read.
This is certainly a beautifully written book, but the premise that it is about the pleasure of books and why we read them is somewhat misleading. It is really a story of people, and their incredibly complex lives, and in that it loses its way a little. The characters are only hinted at, whereas I like to know more about them, and their adventures drift into the fantastic, whilst attempting to stay grounded in the real world.
Somehow it doesn't get there. Sure it is lovely to read, with beautiful prose, but it was a struggle to finish. I like books that grab my attention, and hold it to the end.
The book opens during the siege of Quebec in 1759, just before the town is about to be taken by the British. A French count meets a beautiful girl in a bombed out bookshop, and she tells him the story of one of the books in the shop...
The rest of the book is the story of Nicholas Flood, who is brought from London to the Balkans by an eccentric Count, who wants him to create books that will fit in with his castle. The castle is designed so that all of the rooms are in perpetual motion, moving like a giant clockwork toy. Flood's first commission is to make a book without end. However, he falls in love with the Count's daughter, and when they are discovered, Flood is imprisoned, and the daughter is banished.
Giving away more would spoil the surprises in the plot, which not surprisingly, is driven by Flood's desire to find the Count's daughter once more, despite the obstacles that are put in his way. In the process of doing this, he creates another magical book.
This is a historical novel that will appeal to you if you liked "Perfume", "The Name of the Rose" "An Instance of the Fingerpost" or the Thomas Pargeter novels, or "A Case of Curiosities". The only thing that stops it getting five stars is that I felt it pulled its punches a bit - there are enough materials in here for a much bigger novel, and once you are immersed in the world that Wharton creates, you don't want to leave. If every character's backstory was described as lovingly as the French aristocrat in the first chapter, there would have been a lot more to the book, and I would have enjoyed it even more.
I felt that once Wharton had created so many interesting characters and situations, he would do a lot more with them, especially as he sends them all over the world (Venice, London, China). Having said that, other readers may prefer the fact that the novel is not that long, and the story is certainly satisfying. No loose ends or anything like that.
This is one of the best books I've read in a long time. Wharton takes elements from Borges and Calvino and blends it with some well researched and fascinating history. Like a previous reviewer wrote, it's such a compelling universe with such well developed characters that I didn't want it to end. But Wharton knows how to tell a story and he does it very well. It reminded me in many ways of Neal Stephenson's Baroque Cycle, minus several thousand pages and several dollars. It's selling for pennis here, so there's no reason at all not to buy it.
Fabulous book, one of my childhood favourites that I was delighted to track down again. But DO NOT BUY THE KINDLE EDITION! The formatting is completely messed up. Go with the paperback edition and enjoy a really beautiful book about books.
Ebook PDF Salamander  edition by Thomas Wharton Literature  Fiction eBooks

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