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The Golem and the Jinni von Helene Wecker
Lädt ...

The Golem and the Jinni (2013. Auflage)

von Helene Wecker

MitgliederRezensionenBeliebtheitDurchschnittliche BewertungDiskussionen
5,4133591,925 (4.12)415
Chava, a golem brought to life by a disgraced rabbi, and Ahmad, a jinni made of fire, form an unlikely friendship on the streets of New York until a fateful choice changes everything.
Mitglied:AmaroqDeQuebrazas
Titel:The Golem and the Jinni
Autoren:Helene Wecker
Info:Harper (2013), Kindle Edition, 657 pages
Sammlungen:Deine Bibliothek, Lese gerade, Wunschzettel, Noch zu lesen, Gelesen, aber nicht im Besitz, Favoriten
Bewertung:
Tags:to-read, writing, psychology, movies, filmmaking, literature, graphic novels, screenplays, painting, drawing, reading, music, anthropology, sociology, sciences, liberal politics

Werk-Informationen

Golem und Dschinn von Helene Wecker

  1. 71
    Das Schneemädchen von Eowyn Ivey (Iudita)
  2. 94
    Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell von Susanna Clarke (spacemoth, unlucky)
    unlucky: Both have magic hidden in a historical setting, and both have the same kind of atmosphere.
  3. 72
    Die unglaublichen Abenteuer von Kavalier und Clay von Michael Chabon (sturlington, Othemts)
    sturlington: The author said it inspired her.
  4. 31
    Das Auge des Golem von Jonathan Stroud (passion4reading)
    passion4reading: An example of a successful combination of different cultural/mystical elements, with a djinni and - surprisingly - a golem.
  5. 21
    Das Amulett von Samarkand von Jonathan Stroud (Anjali.Negi)
  6. 10
    The Strange and Beautiful Sorrows of Ava Lavender von Leslye Walton (Othemts)
  7. 10
    Der Ozean am Ende der Straße von Neil Gaiman (sturlington)
  8. 00
    The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue von V. E. Schwab (soelo)
  9. 00
    The Bird King von G. Willow Wilson (Othemts)
  10. 013
    Eisenthron von George R. R. Martin (capetowncanada)
    capetowncanada: After reading George R.R. Martin I've had a hard time finding anything that measures up. This does just that, a well written and imaginative story of two fabled creatures in 1899 NY.
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I wanted to give this four stars because it was really well written. However, I could not because it was a bit too angsty for my taste. ( )
  jfranzone | Feb 14, 2024 |
A very unique book. I loved the fairy/folk tale feel of the book and learned much about these tales in Jewish and Middle Eastern culture. Yet the book was so much more than a magical story; it was about finding your place in this world and the importance of free will. I loved Chava and her journey to find her humanity. ( )
  slittleson | Feb 2, 2024 |
I loved this book. Wecker is a master of nuance and the telling detail.

I completely fell in love with the flawed, heart-achingly complex characters of Chava and Ahmed. Wecker's beautiful writing made all the characters deliciously fascinating, and the setting was so vivid, every time I set the book down, I felt disoriented. I honestly feel like I have been living in the old Jewish and Syrian neighborhoods of turn of the century New York.

I hated for it to end, but it did. And it ended in a way that, unlike so many recent books, did not fizzle or disappoint. Five stars.
( )
  BethOwl | Jan 24, 2024 |
The Golem and the Jinni goes on and on and on. A lot of the story could have been edited out and still have had a long story. Three stars were given to this book because it left the reader wanting it to end already. ( )
  lbswiener | Jan 14, 2024 |
In middle and high school there were book reports that we'd have to present in front of the class. Every time the straight-A honor students would recite a passionless checklist of all of the required beats expected from them on the rubric. The class was divided in between those who didn't read the book and those who read the words but couldn't care less about the meaning. But the latter category could fake enthusiasm enough to earn perfect grades every time. Meanwhile my impassioned and overlong screed against an esoteric and probably half-imagined theme in the book got me a trip to the principal's office. It was maddening. To this day I can still hear the insincere tone, the forced meter and timbre in the voices of those top students and it makes me cringe.
I mention this because The Golem and the Jinni reads like middle school. There was nothing wrong with it in a technical sense, as though the author were given a rubric and a set of instructions and dutifully hit every one. But it used the same plodding, uninspired, and inartistic tone throughout the entire book. The voice didn't change or modulate between different characters, it didn’t convey the excitement or the fear of the fantasy, or the loneliness of the characters. I've read authors who deliberately eschew impassioned or evocative language in order to convey the numbness of their characters. But Wecker clearly wasn't going for something like that. Something is rotten when you describe a genie creating a glass castle out of the desert sands using the same language as a shopping list.
Abigail Nussbaum’s review in Strange Horizons makes some excellent points: Wecker wrote a vapid historical fiction and then a vapid fantasy and then accidentally left the blender on. ( )
1 abstimmen ethorwitz | Jan 3, 2024 |
The title characters of “The Golem and the Jinni” are not the book’s only magic. The story is so inventive, so elegantly written and so well constructed that it’s hard to believe this is a first novel. Clearly, otherworldly forces were involved.
hinzugefügt von karenb | bearbeitenStar-Tribune, Curt Schleier (Jun 15, 2013)
 
You think a relationship is complicated when a woman is from Venus and a man is from Mars? Trust me, that’s a piece of cake compared with the hurdles that a modest golem and a mercurial jinni face when they fall in love.
 
The sometimes slow pace picks up considerably as the disparate characters decipher the past and try to save the souls variously threatened by the golem and the jinni, as well as by the Jewish conjurer and (surprise) a Syrian wizard. The interplay of loyalties and the struggle to assert reason over emotion keep the pages flipping.
hinzugefügt von karenb | bearbeitenNew York Times, Susan Cokal (May 16, 2013)
 

» Andere Autoren hinzufügen

AutorennameRolleArt des AutorsWerk?Status
Helene WeckerHauptautoralle Ausgabenberechnet
Beals, Jesse TarboxUmschlagillustrationCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
Guidall, GeorgeErzählerCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
Ljoenes, RichardUmschlaggestalterCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
Ruoto, WilliamGestaltungCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt

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The Golem's life began in the hold of a steamship.
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"A man might desire something for a moment, while a larger part of him rejects it. You'll need to learn to judge people by their actions, not their thoughts."
You must learn how to act according to what people say and do, not what they wish or fear.
These were the world's first people. Everything they did, every action and decision, was entirely new, without precedent. They had no larger society to turn to, no examples of how to behave. They only had the Almighty to tell them right from wrong. And like children, if His commands ran counter to their desires, sometimes they chose not to listen. And then they learned that there are consequences to one's actions.
As the daughter of one of the richest and most prominent families in New York--indeed, in the country--it had been made clear to her, in ways both subtle and overt, that she was expected to little more than simply exist, biding her time and minding her manners until she made a suitable match and continued the family line. Her future unrolled before her like a dreadful tapestry, its pattern set and immutable. There would be a wedding, and then a house somewhere nearby on the avenue, with a nursery for the children that were, of course, mandatory.
"Once a golem develops a taste for destruction," the old rabbi said, "little can stop it save the words that destroy it. Not all golems are as crude or stupid as this one, but all share the same essential nature. They are tools of man, and they are dangerous. Once they have disposed of their enemies they will turn on their masters. They are creatures of last resort. Remember that."
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Chava, a golem brought to life by a disgraced rabbi, and Ahmad, a jinni made of fire, form an unlikely friendship on the streets of New York until a fateful choice changes everything.

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Durchschnitt: (4.12)
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