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The Book of Air and Shadows


by Michael Gruber

List Price: $24.95
8 New starting at: $7.92
10 Used starting at: $3.99
Sales Rank: 169974
Studio: William Morrow
Binding: Hardcover
Number Of Pages: 480
Publication Date: April 01, 2007
Publisher: William Morrow


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EDITORIAL REVIEWS

Product Description

A distinguished Shakespearean scholar found tortured to death . . .

A lost manuscript and its secrets buried for centuries . . .

An encrypted map that leads to incalculable wealth . . .

The Washington Post called Michael Gruber's previous work "a miracle of intelligent fiction and among the essential novels of recent years." Now comes his most intellectually provocative and compulsively readable novel yet.

Tap-tapping the keys and out come the words on this little screen, and who will read them I hardly know. I could be dead by the time anyone actually gets to read them, as dead as, say, Tolstoy. Or Shakespeare. Does it matter, when you read, if the person who wrote still lives?

These are the words of Jake Mishkin, whose seemingly innocent job as an intellectual property lawyer has put him at the center of a deadly conspiracy and a chase to find a priceless treasure involving William Shakespeare. As he awaits a killer—or killers—unknown, Jake writes an account of the events that led to this deadly endgame, a frantic chase that began when a fire in an antiquarian bookstore revealed the hiding place of letters containing a shocking secret, concealed for four hundred years. In a frantic race from New York to England and Switzerland, Jake finds himself matching wits with a shadowy figure who seems to anticipate his every move. What at first seems like a thrilling puzzle waiting to be deciphered soon turns into a dangerous game of cat-and-mouse, where no one—not family, not friends, not lovers—is to be trusted.

Moving between twenty-first-century America and seventeenth-century England, The Book of Air and Shadows is a modern thriller that brilliantly re-creates William Shakespeare's life at the turn of the seventeenth century and combines an ingenious and intricately layered plot with a devastating portrait of a contemporary man on the brink of self-discovery . . . or self-destruction.



CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 3.5 based on 95 reviews)

A Book of Substance  
Who is this guy and how does he know so much about people, Shakespeare, arcane ciphers, and have the ability to spill it all out on a page full of sharp and intelligent prose?

I bought this book because I had read Gruber's voodoo trilogy starting with Tropic of Night. I remember those books for their attention to plot and the depth of the characters caught up in it. The books were fascinating because Gruber's bizarre story lines were driven by the personalities living the story and not the other way around. His characters were not stage props moved back in forth in service of the story. They were the story.

I ordered this book with some trepidation. I am not a big fan of Shakespeare or the Da Vinci Code. The former is to stilted, the latter so formulaic that it should have gone right to a video game to be played on my kid's XBox.

I could not have been more pleasantly surprised. From the first sentence to the last, the people in this book, all of them, dead or alive, speak to you. They invite you to sit in the drawing room of their dreams, good and bad, and listen. And you do at great benefit
to a plot that moves along as a result of those dreams.

Every character in this book could have been a cliche. None of them are. As a consequence, the plot, involving a missing Shakepeare play, is not. That is the difference between this book and the Da Vinci Code.

I will miss Mishkin, Crosetti, and most of all, Carolyn Rolly.

Here is a point of reference. Think of Thomas Cook collaborating with Robert Ludlam.
November 11, 2008

Literary thriller trumps Da Vinci Code  
Literary thriller of the type popular since The Da Vinci Code (and much better done, by the way, than that oversold, underwritten mediocrity), Gruber posits a newly-discovered letter by a contemporary of William Shakespeare that refers to ciphered letters detailing spying on Shakespeare's life and a potentially extant manuscript of a previously-unknown play.

Of course, there are questions about the verity of the letter (a Shakespeare scholar previously duped by a similar fraud plays a prominent role), the existence and verity of the ciphered spy letters, and most of all the play manuscript. Gruber maintains this tension nearly to the last page of the book, not an easy feat when weaving together the different threads of the story while keeping the reader interested and the story hurdling forward.

The book includes its share of cliches including simpering literary homosexuals, fast-living wealthy New Yorkers, and Russian gangsters, but to Gruber's credit he plays the story for laughs when it needs it and makes the stereotypes plausible.
September 18, 2008

Complex and engaging  
I've noticed a wide variety of opinions posted about this book so I felt compelled to weigh in. I found it to be an engrossing tale that weaves together the stories of characters from Elizabethan England and contemporary New York with a terrific command of narrative and suspense.

I very much appreciated the author's ability to evoke the very different atmospheres of these very different places while introducing a wide array of characters and subplots. It's the sort of book that you can get lost in, almost like a good Victorian novel with many interconnected layers. I see that several people have likened the book to The DaVinci Code, but I actually found it more similar to A.S. Byatt's "Possession," with which it shares a literary focus (e.g., Shakespeare) and also a back-and-forth structure between Elizabethan and contemporary stories.

I definitely recommend the book for anyone who enjoys Byatt or historical mysteries.
September 06, 2008

Sophomoric  
Good story lost in the over emphasis on sex. Wouldn't buy another of his books.
September 01, 2008

Save your money and time  
Page 93. That's as far as I was willing to waste any more time waiting for this book to get to be worth reading.
August 10, 2008


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