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20 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars MOVED
This novel was given to me by a friend and lover years ago, and remains one of the books that has moved me more than any. As he does in his better known works, Wilder manages to touch his reader deeply with the complexity of the human spirit, move us to tears without ever resorting to sentimentality. A powerful exploration of the "American Individual", the...
Published on September 26, 2000 by kkupferstein

versus
1.0 out of 5 stars Tedious
If you like character sketches and lots of vignettes, this book is packed with them. If you like philosophical meanderings and quasi-religious sketches from all sorts of perspectives, this book has them. If you like pessimism shrouded in optimism, this book has that, too. If, however, you like to read a novel with a plot worth its length, try a different book...
Published 3 months ago by M. Anderson


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20 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars MOVED, September 26, 2000
By 
"kkupferstein" (Andover, MA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Eighth Day (Hardcover)
This novel was given to me by a friend and lover years ago, and remains one of the books that has moved me more than any. As he does in his better known works, Wilder manages to touch his reader deeply with the complexity of the human spirit, move us to tears without ever resorting to sentimentality. A powerful exploration of the "American Individual", the family, love and man's search for self and meaning. A must read, and a generous gift to those you love. One cannot help but reach within one's self and do a bit of soul-examining while/after reading this book. Haunting, inspiring and memorable.
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18 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Unjustly neglected classic, December 26, 1998
By 
This review is from: The Eighth Day (Hardcover)
A triumph of technique, The Eighth Day may be the ultimate achievement of Wilder's novelistic career - in microcosm, a story of the hundred years from 1845 to the Second World War, the novel focuses on two families in one town and the aftermath of a murder. While the writing gets bogged down in verbiage from time to time, the characters are exquisitely drawn, and the tale is gripping and powerfully told, without sentimentality, and completely unpredictable. The murder mystery at the story's heart is, alas, a great big red herring and not particularly satisfying - but those who read the book for its evocative portrayal of a bygone America and its uniquely Wilder-esque turns of phrase will be thrilled and moved.
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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars a great and sadly neglected book, August 10, 2001
By 
tenordan (rural, old fashioned, small town Maine) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Eighth Day (Hardcover)
Thornton Wilder is best known as a playwright- for Our Town, The Skin of Our Teeth and the Matchmaker. He was also an excellent novelist, and his novels should be much more well known. The Eighth Day is one of my all-time favorite books. The plot is exciting, but the beauty of the book is in the great compassion Wilder shows for his fellow humans. In this, it reminds me of Our Town. You will not regret reading this book.
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Eighth Day, April 12, 2006
By 
Bomojaz (South Central PA, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Eighth Day (Hardcover)

Set in a dismal Illinois coal town around the turn of the twentieth century, resident John Ashley is accused of killing Breckenridge Lansing, the money-grubbing, incompetent owner of the coal mine; he is found guilty and sentenced to be executed. But on his way to prison, he is suddenly rescued by six unidentified men and set free. He makes his way to Chile, puts his engineering background and love of mathematics to good use, and eventually makes his way back to the US. Ashley becomes a "man of faith," that faith being defined as a belief in a better, more caring, American community. (A new beginning = the Eighth Day.) One character says, "The [human] race is undergoing its education. What is education? It is the bridge man crosses from the self-enclosed, self-favoring life into a consciousness of the entire community of mankind." The "heroes" of the novel are those who defy the conventions that would keep them from crossing that bridge (Lily Ashley pursues a career as a singer, defying Victorian conventions) and those who wash their hands of the filthy pursuit of materialistic well-being (Roger Ashley becomes a muckraking journalist in Chicago eager to help the poor). The truth of John Ashley's innocence of the crime is revealed at the end (though Wilder tells us he's innocent in the Prologue). An annoying feature of the book is Wilder's blunt moralizing, especially near the end; characters are forced to make these little speeches about "false hopes" and "people changing" that make them suddenly appear remote and snobbish. (I'm not criticizing the message here, only Wilder's methods.) Wilder holds out a great deal of hope for the future of America, though he believes the road ahead is perilous with lots of false turns possible. This is his most ambitious novel, and it won the National Book Award in 1968.
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This is it: the Great American Novel, May 27, 2009
By 
AliMcJ (Dallas, Texas) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Eighth Day: A Novel (Paperback)
Until I had some time on my hands not many good books (read "high-profile") to read in English for entertainment while living overseas, and _The Eighth Day_ came through my hands, Thornton Wilder was just "a 20th century middle american white male traditionalist," to me, a result of over-exposure to the clinically edited versions of "Our Town," presented to us in school and on the big and small screens. The title itself, "The Eighth Day," confounded me and caused me to bypass the book whenever I saw it, thinking it was "a war novel," confusing it with "The Longest Day."

I settled down to give it a go and was unable to put it aside. When I finished reading it, I said -- as it encompassed so many places with a unifying sense of metaphysical connections -- "Look no further. This is it: The Great American Novel. I don't know what the fuss has been about, 'oh who could we pick?'. . . 'it has not yet been written. . .'
Clearly it has been, and has been languishing on library shelves throughout all the bloodless PG-PC interpretations of "Our Town," to which we have been subjected, all in the hopes that the bland versions introduced to us we intrigue us enough to read more on our own. "Our Town" has been presented as our 'been there, done that' exposure to Thornton Wilder:'" a grave disservice, perhaps an intentional burying of a thoughtful, perceptive, and persuasive -- not to mention very very hip -- author under layers of one-size-fits-all theatre.
If you haven't read it, do. It is the kind of book that comes back in bits and pieces -- in scenes remembered as one's own experiences are -- over the years.

Looking at the reviews here already, I was surprised to see that all of us who thoroughly enjoyed reading this book have such close similarity of responses: "candidate for great american novel," "sadly neglected," "memorable," inspiring . . . .
It is a book that is hard to describe, as it is an experience that takes hold in the reader, an experience of scenes we think perhaps were ones we have been in, somewhere, sometime, or of which we have somehow a deeply felt/remembered knowledge.

I don't read many American authors, preferring British authors with a mention for the Booker Prize. Thornton Wilder does it for me -- perhaps closest to Somerset Maugham, yet wholly American (and here we should not be envisioning a flag-waving bumper sticking "patriot"). It is that part of what is really American (forget the pumpkin pies and turkey) that survives in spite of all efforts to eradicate its soul.

The title, _The Eighth Day_, becomes easier to remember and less likely to be confused with "a war novel" when we consider that yes, "on the seventh day, God rested," and all time since then has been the Eighth Day of creation, one in which man -- Kerouac's "Desolation Angels" -- is to be making the most of what has been given him to work with, his purpose in living, acting, working, as another put it, to define God to himself.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An undiscovered treasure, August 8, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: The Eighth Day (Hardcover)
This is one of my very favorite novels, and it breaks my heart to see just how few people have heard of it. The engrossing storyline, brilliant characterizations, and Wilder's beautiful writing style make this a joy to read. I recommend it to everyone.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Must-Read, December 23, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: The Eighth Day (Hardcover)
The Eigth Day is as an engrossing and poignant examination of the human condition as I have ever encountered, presenting the struggles of decent people in an unpredictable and sometimes cruel world. Here we find brilliantly conceived and inspired characters, painted in Wilder's elegant prose--his ideal Americans, proven worthy of praise through the tests of fire. The journey crosses decades and continents and in the end the reader feels that they have traveled through more than a clever story, but through the hearts and souls of a remarkable family.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Monument Fiction, November 1, 2007
By 
Eric Maroney (Trumansburg, NY) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Eighth Day: A Novel (Paperback)
In The Eight Day, Thorton Wilder tackles life's great question: is there a design to existence, or is it all an accident? Is there some structure to the cosmos and the human place within it, or is it some universal happenstance? Wilder, near the end, seems to come down on the side of design with the ruminations of the old Indian leader of the "cult" above Coaltown. But he seems unable to hold this vision. On page 145 one character ruminates: "Life affords no second chances... Is this what growing older is - seeing always more clearly the things we failed to see?" And this gem later on: "His parents were both forty when he was ten - that is to say they were beginning to be resigned to the knowledge that life was disappointing and basically meaningless." No matter how hard a person holds onto the desire for order, the pull toward disorder is stronger. Wilder creates a novel with characters of a type, etched in the fictional equivalent of stone. They are contending with mighty destinies, against a backdrop which marks them for greatness and flux. In this way the novel gets its great strength and weakness. It is a monumental achievement, but lacks the reality of real life experience. Wilder here is testing ideas rather than fleshing a living fictional reality.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Close contender for "The Great American Novel", January 5, 2007
By 
Brandon Mann (Jacksonville, Alabama) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Eighth Day: A Novel (Paperback)
Majestic! Wilder came closer than most to writing The Great American Novel. "The Eighth Day" appears to be the template for the novels of John Irving.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant blend of a murder mystery and an adventure, August 7, 2009
By 
Anonymous (Portland, OR USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Eighth Day: A Novel (Paperback)
Total departure from Wilder's better known "college/small-town" novels, this is, in my estimation, his best work. I found this book at a used book store many years ago and it blew me away. My hard copy is so worn now that I am buying another copy --thank goodness for the re-release of this gem. Other reviewers have given you the general plot line so I won't spoil the shocker for you. Enjoy! You won't be disappointed.
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The Eighth Day: A Novel
The Eighth Day: A Novel by Thornton Wilder (Paperback - January 2, 2007)
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