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The Solitaire Mystery

The Solitaire Mystery

List Price: $7.99
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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Modern Family Fable.
Review: Bottom Line: read it. To yourself, to your kids, to your friends, to your dog, to anyone who will listen. Let the fairy to of a boy searching for life in a unique story put a sparkle of curiosity in your eye. Absolutely enjoyable and lovely.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A journey into questioning the world.
Review: Gaarder's story leads to a fantastic journey, in which the questioning of our own conditions of existence is the key to gain a broader perspective of it. When you read "Maya" following this one, there is an even great pleasure in reading these books.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wonderful, Brilliant, Beautiful
Review: I absolutely love this book and have read it numerous times!
I read Sophie's World by the same author and really liked it so I decided to try this one and bought it at my local bookstore (I was 15 at the time) and I loved it then I still love it now (I'm 18) and would reccomend it to people of any age. Kids will love it for it's fantastical story and adults for the story but also the insight, poetry, and philsophy. It's an amazing tale of fate and fantasy and the details just lock together so cohesively to form the complex story.
It's a must read!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Solitaire Mystery
Review: I consider The Solitaire Mystery a beautiful secret that avid readers are not aware of. It is satisfying, heart-warming literature.

This is a book for people who are not satisfied with modern writing that is hollow and formulaic. It is engrossed in similes and metaphors. It also incorporates a lot of philosophical ideas (some of which are reminiscent of Sophie's World.)

The novel interlocks two different stories - one from the present and one from the past - to illustrate the circularity of life. The premise of the present story is about the journey of a man and his son across Europe to search for his wife. The subtitle accurately describes the book - it is about family.

I highly recommend this novel to people of all ages. It is extremely thought-provoking and simply wonderful.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This philosophical book really makes one think.
Review: I found The Solitaire Mystery to have very vivid characters and a good plot. I think that it is much more captivating than Sophie's World, which I also read. I recommend this book to anyone who wants to think. It raises many questions in one's mind, but answers few. This book interwines past and present, fate and chance, a card game and 'real' life. Although taking place in the land of the philosophers, the main character in this book, Hans, has modern day family problems. This book starts when Hans and his father go off to find Hans' mother who went off to 'find herself'. As they drive to find Hans' mother, they are followed by a strange midget who Hans suspects to be a living card: a joker. A baker in a small village gives Hans a book: a book about living cards...Is it true? One thing Hans does realize is that throughout time there will always be a 'joker'. I think that although this book raises questions about who we are and what our purpose is, it gives one hope; it tells one that although one comes from dust and eventually returns to dust, one's ideas are alive always

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The best philosophy lesson ever!!!
Review: I have read many of Gaarder's books, and so far this is my favourite (and not just his but by any author). Compared to Sophie's world, which has a sort of text book feel to it, this book has a plot and is truly captivating...till the very end (as is all Gaarder's books). I especially like the discussions between the boy and his father. Also the 'solitaire calender'. And how all the characters are so tangled up. This book will definitely get you thinking about life, in a way you have never done. Enjoy!!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This book really changed my life.
Review: The Solitaire Mystery by Jostein Gaarder is easily one of the greatest books that America has ever overlooked, though it's obscurity shouldn't make its value questionable. This tale is extremely complex, but an overall beautifully interwoven story. Not only do you become immersed in it by page one, but it's extremely psychological,philosophical-- a book that I like to call "symbolic fantasy", just like Michael Ende's books, especially the Neverending Story. You will discover so much profundity in this book while you enjoy it although you probably won't catch half of it until you read it again! A must read! Along with it I'd recommend the Neverending Story, other Jostein Gaarder books, The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint Exupery, Alice in Wonderland, the Phantom Tollbooth by Norton Juster, anything.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Post-modern fairytale
Review: The Solitaire Mystery follows a young boy, Hans Thomas, and his father on their way to find their runaway mother. Along the way, they encounter various people, each connected by a strange world long ago, leading ultimately to the unraveling of the mysterious pasts of Hans and his family.

The Solitaire Mystery explores the strange world of coincidences and determinism. It dabbles in the philosophy of consciousness, reminding one of Descartes's elegant statement, "Cogito ergo sum," except declared this time by a pack of living playing cards. While definitely surreal, Gaarder touches questions intrinsic in every culture in the world.

The only problem I had with this book was its story-within-story format. This made it somewhat difficult to follow, as it reached the point when Hans was reading a book about someone telling someone else a story told to him by another person.

However, despite the heady material The Solitaire Mystery utilizes, it still reads as light and whimsical. This is a fairytale a la Alice-in-Wonderland, but at the same time, deep and profound.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Post-modern fairytale
Review: The Solitaire Mystery follows a young boy, Hans Thomas, and his father on their way to find their runaway mother. Along the way, they encounter various people, each connected by a strange world long ago, leading ultimately to the unraveling of the mysterious pasts of Hans and his family.

The Solitaire Mystery explores the strange world of coincidences and determinism. It dabbles in the philosophy of consciousness, reminding one of Descartes's elegant statement, "Cogito ergo sum," except declared this time by a pack of living playing cards. While definitely surreal, Gaarder touches questions intrinsic in every culture in the world.

The only problem I had with this book was its story-within-story format. This made it somewhat difficult to follow, as it reached the point when Hans was reading a book about someone telling someone else a story told to him by another person.

However, despite the heady material The Solitaire Mystery utilizes, it still reads as light and whimsical. This is a fairytale a la Alice-in-Wonderland, but at the same time, deep and profound.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Look at life in a whole new fashion
Review: The Solitaire Mystery, while written in the vein of fantastical young adult literature, transcends any particular genre or age group. Gaarder incorporates his philosophy expertise into this ingeniously crafted tale that sparks the imagination and galvanizes the spirit. As we follow a truly singular dichotomy of tales -- one in the real world and one in a magical world of Rainbow Soda and a living and breathing deck of cards.

One cannot truly do justice to this incredible tome in an abbreviated book review other than by simply exhorting others to read it and discover the magic for oneself. Valuable life lessons and refreshing new outlooks on life are yours for the asking...errr, I mean reading.

"The only thing I know is that I know nothing."
- Socrates (as quoted by Gaarder)


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