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Rating: Summary: World Inside A World Review: A singer named Rhett Miller wrote a song whose lyric is, "There is a world inside the world that you see." This kind of Zen-like perspective is one that fits this most interesting story where the external world changes from rural Australia to London to Armenia to Iraq and back again as the story progresses, but whose inner world is filled with characters each trying to find their place within that world. The main character, Edith, starts the story as a teenage girl whose father has died and whose mother, Ada, is somewhat of a lost person, a romantic living amid an immensely practical world of the small village of Nunderup. Her cousin Leopold who visits also seems restless, perhaps seeking adventure or simply trying to see enough of the world to find his place. With him is his driver and companion Aram who flashes on the scene briefly, an orphan from the atrocities in Armenia, also rootless, not particularly belonging to anyone or anywhere. Upon finding herself with the social stigma of an unmarried pregnant girl in 1937 Australia, Edith gives birth to Jim and decides to keep her baby and find the father Aram who she believes will marry her when he learns of their child. With this, the novel becomes quite the epic adventure, crossing the sea, encountering a cook who seems to have too fond a liking for children, staying with her aunt in London before setting out for Armenia. There we meet a whole range of characters including Hagop who befriends her and Tati the visionary Armenian poet while a world of external political intrigue amidst war swirls around Edith and young Jim while the internal world compass seems solidly fixed on finding a home. Eventually, Edith learns of Aram's death and flees to Iran to be reunited ever so briefly with Leopold who takes them to a safe haven in Iraq, the very orphanage from which Aram came. By now, Jim's internal world is quickly developing as he also seems out of place, waking when he should be sleeping, not quite fitting in. Events take them back to Australia where Jim continues to be more of an odd duck, not quite feeling at home in his own country. Joan London's prose grabs you while the story's worldwide scope lets you travel through the book, all the while seeing the world inside the world within each of the characters. "Gilgamesh" is an excellent accomplishment! Enjoy!
Rating: Summary: Rich offering of a brilliant writer Review: An evocative novel of loss, love, and compassion, Gilgamesh is set in Australia in 1937, just prior to WWII. When Aram a world traveler arrives with Edith's cousin, teenaged Edith's eyes are opened to a bigger world outside the small woman-dominated farm on which she lives, and her life is changed. Two yrs later, she and her young son (fathered by Aram) find themselves stuck behind enemy lines in their journey to find him. The journey from Australia to Armenia, and thru the Middle East before finally returning `home' mirrors the Gilgamesh metaphor of the wandering king and explores the concept of Home. Stunning writing and insight into character makes this debut fiction a real keeper.
Rating: Summary: A Journey Back To Where It Started Review: Gilgamesh has the feel of an elongated short story. At the center is Edith,a young girl living in Australia in 1937. An extended stay from her cousin Leopold and his Armenian friend Aram brings life to Edith in unexpected ways. Their departure sets off her own longing, and it's not long before she begins a journey that will take her to Soviet Armenia and eventually back. I wish I would've had the time to devour this in one sitting. Unfortunately the imapct of the novel was lost slightly because of the time it took me to finish. Still,it's a well written and lovely story.
Rating: Summary: Superb Review: Gilgamesh is an excellent, excellent novel, well-written and interesting. The story, while not exotic or outlandish, still has a crisp, new, fresh feel to it. The novel concerns, mainly, Edith, a young Australian woman who is 17 in the late 30s. Her British cousin Leopold and his Armenian friend Aram, visit Edith's family farm for an extended stay. Aram and Leopold's travel stories spark Edith's imagination and after they leave, she decides, for various reasons, to follow them and seek them out in their home lands. Despite the war raging on around her, Edith manages to leave Australia and makes it to Armenia. Edith's life is interesting, her story, engaging. Ms. London writes extremely well and has given us a superb, engaging and compelling novel. Enjoy.
Rating: Summary: A wonderfully crafted novel Review: Gilgamesh: A Novel (winner of the 2002 Age Book of the Year award) is a wonderfully crafted novel by Joan London which is adroitly narrated by Deidre Rubenstein in this complete and unabridged audiobook version of this award winning saga. Drawing upon ancient myths to put together a hero's story of struggle, battles, the never ending search for acceptance, and finally his return home, Gilgamesh: A Novel is a profound and memorably entertaining "theatre of the mind" experience. Flawlessly produced, Gilgamesh: A Novel is a highly recommended addition to community library audiobook collections.
Rating: Summary: Didn't really grab me Review: I read this book because it was selected by my local book club. I kept reading it because I kept hoping it was going to get better, but it just never really grabbed my imagination. Yes, it was well written and I could picture a lot of the places and people, but I never got totally involved with the characters and the plot.
Rating: Summary: Lyrical and Engaging Review: Joan London's GILGAMESH is an understated and engaging novel of physical and emotional adventure, and the unknowable and invisible bonds that unite some people in life. It is 1937, and seventeen-year-old Edith has lived her whole life on the wild Australian coast on a bit of land her father has tried to tame for years. After her father's death, the land grows harder and harder to maintain; she, along with her mother and sister, soon slip into complacency and solitude.The arrival of her cousin Leopold and his intriguing Armenian friend Aram brings Edith back to life. The two young men, having just returned from an archeological dig in Iraq, challenge her to think about the world beyond southwestern Australia. They fascinate her with tales of the places they've traveled and the worlds they have seen. With Aram, Edith shares a special attraction and, after he and Leopold leave, she finds out that she is pregnant with his child. With new confidence, Edith decides to keep the baby and, after her son Jim is born, the two set off on a journey to find Aram. Her love and longing for Aram, a man she hardly knows in any conventional sense, take Edith and her son from their isolated home to Soviet-ruled Armenia and then to the Middle East before returning to Australia. This journey brings her closer to Leopold and makes her more aware of her own needs and desires. It instills in Jim a sense of Armenian identity, as well as a wanderlust similar to that of Leopold and his father. All of London's characters seem lonely. They come together under often dramatic or dangerous circumstances and then share the ordinary details and events of their lives. Despite the subtext of espionage, war and world affairs, this is a quiet novel as shy as Edith but still as bold. London's subdued tone belays the strong emotions of the characters, the urgency of Edith's need to find Aram and the drama of the story. The loneliness of the characters manifests in passionate relationships and these relationships compose much of the novel. Edith's restlessness drives the plot, but the friendship and adventures of Aram and Leopold underscore the action. Their relationship parallels that of the mythical Gilgamesh and Enkidu. But by the end of the novel, Edith, Leopold and Jim are all like Gilgamesh, living life as best they can in the absence of Aram, their Enkidu. When he grows up, Jack becomes a figure like Edith, journeying far, with the assistance of Leopold, to search out the legacy of Aram. The pace of GILGAMESH is slow, sometimes drowsy, but the novel is well written, a uniquely told yet classically understood take on the themes of friendship, longing and journeying. While no knowledge of the myth of Gilgamesh is required to understand, appreciate or enjoy the novel, it would certainly enhance the reading. Spinning from a myth of universal themes, London has created a novel just as evocative and universal. Like Gilgamesh, Edith must leave home, test herself, love and lose much in order to learn her true strength and worth. Like Gilgamesh, she comes home weary and wise. And the reader, invested in the brutally real lives of Edith and Jim, gains much from this emotional and honest tale. --- Reviewed by Sarah Rachel Egelman
Rating: Summary: COMPANIONSHIP AND QUESTS Review: You know the relationship between wounded soldier Frank and young nurse Ada is not very promising when the narrator writes "They should really never have met." The time is right after the end of World War I and Ada longs for a place where there is no war. Frank says there is such a place. His homeland, Australia. Promising her a paradise of honey Edenic bliss, they marry and Ada and him end up in the middle of nowhere in the bush as part of a group settlement, which is promised a certain parcel of land if they clear it and build houses. As the years go by, Ada becomes more and more depressed by the rough living, realizing that she was tricked into coming but not having the strength to leave. Years later after an unhappy marriage, the dying Frank wonders what the point of it was and thinks that perhaps it will "work itself out in the following generations." That's what this book is really about. Frank and Ada's two daughters, Edith and Frances. Growing up in the wilds they are relatively free of outside sources of information as they grow into young women, until their cousin Leopold, an archealogist, shows up with his Armenian friend, Aram. They open up a world beyond the bush and cause Edith to long for another place and Frances to retreat into fear. They soon leave, but something has changed with Edith. She is pregnant, and she will feel compelled to seek out the father of her child, no matter what the danger or the foreign country she must travel to. Gilgamesh was a fine novel. The title comes from the fact that Leopold and Aram, two bosom buddies, much as Gilgamesh and Enkidu are in the ancient myth, tell the story to the two girls. What is a book except a quest for companionship? Everyone in this novel seems to be looking for someone to share life with, whether in the end, that is attainable, is something else again. The characters here, well, most of them, seem to be wanderlust stricken souls who cannot exactly figure out what it is they are missing. To answer this craving, they simply move. After reading this book, I felt as though I had went on a long journey. There's a real feeling of depth and soul-searching you can sense in the author. Wow, great book. I have nothing negative to say about it.
Rating: Summary: COMPANIONSHIP AND QUESTS Review: You know the relationship between wounded soldier Frank and young nurse Ada is not very promising when the narrator writes "They should really never have met." The time is right after the end of World War I and Ada longs for a place where there is no war. Frank says there is such a place. His homeland, Australia. Promising her a paradise of honey Edenic bliss, they marry and Ada and him end up in the middle of nowhere in the bush as part of a group settlement, which is promised a certain parcel of land if they clear it and build houses. As the years go by, Ada becomes more and more depressed by the rough living, realizing that she was tricked into coming but not having the strength to leave. Years later after an unhappy marriage, the dying Frank wonders what the point of it was and thinks that perhaps it will "work itself out in the following generations." That's what this book is really about. Frank and Ada's two daughters, Edith and Frances. Growing up in the wilds they are relatively free of outside sources of information as they grow into young women, until their cousin Leopold, an archealogist, shows up with his Armenian friend, Aram. They open up a world beyond the bush and cause Edith to long for another place and Frances to retreat into fear. They soon leave, but something has changed with Edith. She is pregnant, and she will feel compelled to seek out the father of her child, no matter what the danger or the foreign country she must travel to. Gilgamesh was a fine novel. The title comes from the fact that Leopold and Aram, two bosom buddies, much as Gilgamesh and Enkidu are in the ancient myth, tell the story to the two girls. What is a book except a quest for companionship? Everyone in this novel seems to be looking for someone to share life with, whether in the end, that is attainable, is something else again. The characters here, well, most of them, seem to be wanderlust stricken souls who cannot exactly figure out what it is they are missing. To answer this craving, they simply move. After reading this book, I felt as though I had went on a long journey. There's a real feeling of depth and soul-searching you can sense in the author. Wow, great book. I have nothing negative to say about it.
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