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Average rating4
Winner of the Man Booker Prize of 2013. Wonderful novel taking place in New-Zealand during the golden rush.
Une intrigue complexe et fine à la fois, vrai roman d'aventure historique mais pas seulement. L'auteur s'amuse avec nous et nous mène de révélations en révélations tout en nous laissant à la fin du livre avec une grande envie de continuer dans le monde qu'elle a créé pour nous.
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No wonder she won the Booker. How did she organise such complexity so well?
Eleanor Catton's Booker Prize-winning novel The Luminaries is many things. It's a depiction of life in a gold-rush-era town in New Zealand. It's a story about families. It's a mystery. It's several mysteries, each unspooling at its own pace. And true to its title, it takes inspiration from the moon (each chapter is shorter than the one proceeding it, meant as a reference to the waning of the moon) and the planets/stars (some characters are based on astrological signs, others to the typical traits associated with the planets). It begins when a Scottish lawyer named Walter Moody arrives in the small town of Hokitika to make his fortune as a prospector. The ship on which he arrived, the Godspeed, was wrecked and he has to make his way ashore without his trunk. He decides to spend his time in the Crown Hotel while he waits for the wreck to be plunged and his belongings to be recovered, and shortly after he arrives, he manages to find himself in the bar of the hotel with twelve men who are clearly all gathered for a purpose. He manages to draw out from them a strange tale of several tragedies and mysteries that all seem to have happened at about the same time.
Shortly before Moody's arrival, a local politician, Alistair Lauderback, arrives in town to stump for votes. On the outskirts of town, he arrives at the cabin of a recluse, Crosbie Wells, and finds the man very recently deceased. And then, on the same night, a lucky young prospector, Emery Staines, goes missing, and a prostitute, Anna Wetherell, publicly overdoses on the opium to which she is addicted and is imprisoned. Each of the men in the bar of the Crown Hotel has a little piece of the story, and even more develops as time goes on. Bit by bit, the full story in all its beauty and tragedy is revealed, connecting the threads of each seemingly-separate piece together.
This is a big, ambitious novel that requires a lot of attention to keep the characters and their relationships with each other in mental order. In lesser hands, it would be confusing, but Catton keeps it engaging, requiring enough consideration to feel compelled to really focus on the book without making it feel like studying. The characters are complex and interesting, and the tangled web of their interactions with each other keep the tension from slacking. Indeed, for such a long book, it keeps itself going remarkably well, a testament to Catton's skill with prose and plotting. The way the layers of the mysteries the book presents are gradually peeled back and revealed is gratifying, feeling like tiny rewards doled out along the way until the end. The themes of loneliness, the role of chance, truth and lies, and revenge all come in and out of focus throughout, each feeling like it's given time and space to develop without being unduly flogged. For me, it was a wonderful book. It's hard to strike the balance between “passively entertaining” and “too much information management required to properly enjoy”, but The Luminaries was right in the sweet spot. I got lost in it.
Now that I've just gushed about it, it does have some issues. It's a slow starter, taking advantage of its prodigious length to stretch the story out perhaps more than really necessary. Some characters feel like they get the short shrift and if Catton was less wedded to her astrology conceit, should have been cut. The way Catton reveals a bunch of pertinent information right at the end of the book in flashback, almost like a coda after the “real” ending of the story, does feel a little too cute by half. But honestly, those are mostly nitpicks. I'm not the sort to wish that a book would never end (I'm always excited about something on the horizon), but I did close it with a satisfied sigh and think “what a great book”. It's not something to read when you're looking for something breezy and light, but otherwise, I highly highly recommend it.
Since really getting back into reading a few years ago my general reading style has stayed the same. I can read pretty fast and I actively enjoy the process of doing so. That's not to say that I skim, but I'm not the type of person to linger over a page or a sentence that really strikes me. I just take a note of it and move on. The Luminaries is the first book that I've read not only this year but this decade that has made me change that. I read this book a lot slower than I normally do because each page and sentence is worth savoring. For a book that's over 800 pages, that is a serious feat. I'm not quite sure how to describe The Luminaries so this paragraph may be a bit unstructured. It definitely has mysteries but it can't really be classified as a mystery novel. It takes place in the past but it's not really historical fiction. It has thrilling sections but I can't in good conscious call it a thriller. It's just... a damn good novel. The basic gist of it is that 12 people convene in a smoking room in a hotel during the New Zealand gold rush due to a few odd events that have happened over the past few weeks. Over the course of the novel we learn a lot about each of these 12 as well as many others in this small mining town. Catton explores her characters in such lush detail that I feel like I know all of them personally at this point. As we learn more about the characters we also learn just what happened in order to set off the events of the novel. It feels like Catton is really challenging her readers with the way she writes at points. While many of the loose threads are explicitly tied up at various points throughout the novel, many others are finished in a more subtle way, rewarding those attentive enough to notice the tiniest of details in her writing. One of my favorite things about reading is the feeling you get when you realize someone is truly amazing at the act of writing, and I felt that many times while reading The Luminaries. She really makes writing seem like a beautiful art form with the way she crafts this book and the sentences within it. I can't help but... be in awe of her talent. If there is one criticism I have it's that I feel like the book starts out stronger than it finishes, but that is the tiniest of nits that I am picking. I think the first 500 or so pages are a 10 out of 10 and the remaining 300 are a 9 out of 10. Well done Eleanor Catton, your book is super fucking good.
I loved this book. A gold-rush-era New Zealand epic, but with a voice that reminded me of George Eliot.