Submitted by zeroschiuma t3_yhebqr in books

Hello!

A few weeks ago I posted this rec request in another subreddit and someone was kind enough to introduce me to Piranesi by Susanna Clarke - which I read front to end today in one sitting and found absolutely astonishing.

I can't recommend it enough.

Risking to be quoted on r/BrandNewSentence, it's like House Of Leaves by Mark Z. Danielewski and The People In The Trees by Hanya Yanagihara made a British book-baby together.

There's a labirinth-house people get lost into, phisically and metaphorically, and the same mythology of reference as HoL - although executed in a much more cohesive, and appealing way.

And there's the mad scientist and his revolutionary, non-conventional knowledge, just like in Yanagihatra's novel.

But I feel like Piranesi accomplished something its parents could only dream abolut, which is a proper metaphysical architecture (pun very much intended) and a more in-depth collation of its Weltanschauung.

The reference to the episode 3x10 of Doctor Who was not lost on me either.

If you haven't yet, I advise you not to wait any longer and read this incredible novel.

In case you have already, what do you think? Wasn't it awesome?

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