Discover

City of God

Minsik readers
0.0
0 ratings
Other platforms
3.8
4 ratings
1,184
PAGES
~19h 44min
READING TIME
English
LANGUAGE
2
READERS
Penguin Classics 17 views
ISBN
0140448942, 9780140448948
17 views
Minsik want to read: 0
Minsik reading: 0
Minsik read: 0
Open Library want to read: 1
Open Library reading: 0
Open Library read: 1

About Author

Sara Miles

This author is currently well disambiguated and sources point to that she wrote all 7 books linked here (take this bread, jesus freak, city of god, how to hack, opposite sex, native dancer, ordinary women)

Description

"EL Doctorow's City of God starts off not merely with a bang but with the big bang itself, that "great expansive flowering, a silent flash into being in a second or two of the entire outrushing universe". It doesn't remain on this cosmic plane throughout. There's a mystery here, along with a romance, a chilling Holocaust narrative and a deep-focus portrait of fin-de-siécle Manhattan. In the early pages of the novel, an enormous brass cross is pilfered from a church on the Lower East Side. Father Thomas Pemberton of St Timothy's promptly sets off in search of it, dubbing himself the Divinity Detective. Yet he suspects from the start that this is no ordinary theft, with no ordinary solution. The cross eventually turns up on the roof of the Synagogue for Evolutionary Judaism, a tiny Manhattan institution to which Pemberton has clearly been led by fate. His encounter with the synagogue's rabbinical duo -- a husband-and-wife team struggling to reclaim a pre-scriptural state of "unmediated awe"--Transforms his life. It also destroys what's left of his conventional Christian belief. As his relationship with Judaism deepens, he discards the clerical collar altogether and embarks upon a penitential exploration of the Holocaust -- which in turn allows Doctorow to loop his narrative back and forth between several generations of (mostly) Jew and Gentile. City of God is a marvellous hybrid which includes a meta-fictional framework (i.e., an author-as-character with a rather Doctorovian CV), an ongoing rumination on city life and a dozen other major strands and minor players. There is an undeniable power to the way Doctorow makes his fictional worlds collide, setting off all manner of historical and philosophical conflagrations. At one point he imagines "the totality of intimate human narrations/composing a hymn to enlightenment/if that were possible". A tall order, yes. But despite its occasional longueurs, City of God suggests that it is possible indeed." -- from www.amazon.co.uk (Jan. 30, 2011).

Detailed Ratings

0.0Emotional Impact
No ratings yet
0.0Intellectual Depth
No ratings yet
0.0Writing Quality
No ratings yet
0.0Rereadability
No ratings yet
0.0Pacing
No ratings yet
0.0Readability
No ratings yet
0.0Plot Complexity
No ratings yet
0.0Humor
No ratings yet