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  #31  
Old 7th December 2007, 08:53 AM
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sanyuja sanyuja is offline
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Originally Posted by hellow212 View Post
I would like to read The Shadow of the Wind... eventually. I don't think I would be able to understand a lot of it. Even one word in a sentence that I don't know can make the meaning unintelligible, and sometimes it's not possible to get it from the context.
I agree. The beauty of a sentence lies not only on the literal meaning of the words but on its nuances also.

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Originally Posted by hellow212 View Post
Final word? I want to read it in Spanish (and own it), but only when I have a LOT of time on my hands, and when I don't have a bunch of other books checked out.
And that rarely happens, doesn't it?
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  #32  
Old 7th December 2007, 03:51 PM
hellow212 hellow212 is offline
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Originally Posted by sanyuja View Post
And that rarely happens, doesn't it?
Exactly. I had a couple books on reserve at one library, and I checked a couple out at another library, and now all of a sudden I have 8 or 9 library books in my room
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  #33  
Old 10th December 2007, 08:51 AM
jneni jneni is offline
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Originally Posted by Maizara View Post
The Shadow of the Wind and The Thirteenth Tale are similar. Both are love letters to reading/literature, both involve the life of an author, both have bizarre characters... But Setterfield's book would definitely be my preferred read!
I've read Diane Setterfield's The Thirteenth Tale and Zafon's The Shadow of The Wind I agree with what you said, except I would think that it's easier to cruise through The Thirteenth Tale. Zafon's The Shadow of The Wind started off quite interestingly, sadly it falters half-way and ends in a way that I expected. Having said that, it's still enjoyable overall. The Thirteenth Tale is, however, really a page-turner! I finished the book within a day
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  #34  
Old 30th June 2009, 10:05 PM
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Just finished The Shadow of the Wind and on a whole, I'm pretty happy with it being my first Holiday Read (TM) of the year. It's definitely a thriller, a pageturner as they say, with healthy doses of sex, violence and... OK, no rock'n'roll, but used books are kind of like rock'n'roll and there's a lot of those in it too. But it's a thriller written the way I wish more thrillers were; by a writer who might not be a genius but knows his craft, who can bring a setting and a character to life, make you smell the dusty old pages or the fresh blood, and keeps you turning the pages not by having a cliffhanger on every fifth page and killing someone else every time he runs out of plot, but simply by setting up a complex plot and then letting it unfold bit by bit. Oh, and I like the fact that he sets it in a fascist dictatorship just a few years after a very divisive civil war but doesn't make a huge deal of it, just lets it seep through without constantly spelling it out for the reader; it's become normal to the characters, after all. And while it's not exactly Pereira Declares, it touches upon the literature-as-resistance plot but turns it into something more personal than political. Plus, lots of gothic horror novel influences too, can't complain about that.

That's the good news. The bad news? Well, like others have said, it goes on a little too long for an ending that's a little too predictable. That comes with the territory, I guess. And while some of the characters are nicely drawn, others - in particular the women - seem like pawns, prizes or plot devices in the boys' game a little too often. (It feels a bit a propos that one of the major clues is sold for the price of a prostitute.) But hey, it's a machismo culture and of course that's part of the plot too, so I'll overlook that. What's worse is Zafón's tendency to switch narrator when it fits the story; he stays in first person for most of the book, but at times he cannot figure out a way to develop the backstory and just goes into omniscient third for a few pages until we're up to scratch. It yanks me out of the story, reminds me that it's just a story after all, and I'm not too fond of that.

Maybe that's a little unfair to Zafón; after all, with all the weird coincidences and generally blurred lines between the story itself and the stories within it, we might just have a slightly unreliable narrator here (we'd almost have to, or there would be some things that just don't add up). Maybe the book is (or tries to be) smarter than it looks; maybe I should have kept a cooler head than the weather permits, and not let the Barcelona fog trick me. But for now, it's a ; thoroughly enjoyable pageturner, no less, but probably no more.
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  #35  
Old 1st July 2009, 12:04 PM
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Originally Posted by beer good View Post
Just finished The Shadow of the Wind and on a whole, I'm pretty happy with it being my first Holiday Read (TM) of the year.
So now your ready for stieg Larsson Millenium.

Spot on as always BG.
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