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Average rating4
In 1878, two young stage magicians clash in the dark during the course of a fraudulent seance. From that moment on, they vie to outwit and destroy one another. Published in hardcover to international acclaim, "The Prestige" won the World Fantasy Award and Britain's James Tait Black Memorial Prize. Now it finally appears in softcover--sophisticated, breathtaking entertainment.
Reviews with the most likes.
It was good, but like most others have said, the movie is better.
Why?
Better back story for their fued
Keeps the secret of the transported man longer.
Magic is visual. Easier to portray in a movie than in writing.
Condenses the plot to move faster.
Better ending.
This is my first Christopher Priest novel. I think it shall not be my last. What a profoundly eerie, unsettling book. The basic premise of this novel (two feuding illusionists) was turned into the Christopher Nolan film of the same name in 2006. But the film is a very different animal to the book.
Taking the form of written journals by the main protagonists (two present day, two historical) we follow the fortunes of two 19th century illusionists who, through arrogance, pride and simple misunderstanding begin a feud that lasts to the present day. Alfred Borden is a talented illusionist with a dark secret that allows him to perform his greatest illusion: The New Transported Man. The apparent disappearance of Borden from one place only to instantly appear in another. His rival, Rupert Angier, seeks a way to better it, to perfect it. To do this he travels to America and the laboratory of Nikolai Tesla, that great exponent of the mysteries of electricity. His success comes at a cost, a secret that Angier must protect at all costs.
Priest's ingenious novel allows the reader to see the same events from different perspectives and it is only at the very end that the whole horrific picture becomes clear. This is an expertly crafted novel, in clear, precise prose that keeps the reader turning the page. The longest section of the book follows Angier's career and the price he pays for his success is truly awful.
Priest skilfully fills in the gaps as we read each “journal”, only slowly revealing the whole history of the feud. It's a book that lives with you, gets under your skin.
Recommended.
J'avais lu beaucoup de bien de ce roman et après l'avoir terminé je peux dire que les louanges étaient largement méritées. Pour moi, ce livre est un chef d'oeuvre.
Je ne peux pas ici en dire beaucoup sur l'histoire elle-même, de peur de dévoiler des éléments essentiels de l'intrigue. Je dirais simplement que Christopher Priest nous propose de suivre la longue rivalité entre deux prestidigitateurs au tournant du XIXe et du XXe siècle, avec une histoire autour des thèmes de la prestidigitation bien sûr, de l'illusion et de l'identité.
C'est un joyau d'inventivité, un roman construit selon une structure minutieuse qui fonctionne parfaitement. Cela commence doucement, on comprend progressivement où l'auteur veut nous amener, et on finit par dévorer les chapitres les uns après les autres, sans pouvoir s'arrêter. C'est en tout cas à l'image de mon expérience de lecture : un peu lente au début, le temps de se prendre au jeu, avant d'accélérer très nettement pour lire le dernier tiers en moins d'une journée, profitant du moindre temps libre pour lire et terminer ce livre absolument génial.
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