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The Girl with Glass Feet: A Novel [Paperback]

Ali Shaw
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (53 customer reviews)

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Book Description

January 4, 2011

WINNER OF THE DESMOND ELLIOTT PRIZE

Strange things are happening on the remote and snowbound archipelago of St. Hauda’s Land. Magical winged creatures flit around the icy bogland, albino animals hide themselves in the snow-glazed woods, and Ida Maclaird is slowly turning into glass. Ida is an outsider in these parts who has only visited the islands once before. Yet during that one fateful visit the glass transformation began to take hold, and now she has returned in search of a cure.

The Girl with Glass Feet is a love story to treasure, “crafted with elegance and swept by passionate magic and the yearning for connection. A rare pleasure” (Katherine Dunn, author of Geek Love).


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

The cold northern islands of St. Hauda's Land are home to strange creatures and intertwining human secrets in Shaw's earnest, magic-tinged debut. Ida Maclaird returns to the archipelago to find a cure for the condition her last visit brought her—she is slowly turning into glass. The landscape is at once beautiful and ominous, and its residents mistrustful, but she grows close to Midas Crook, a young man who, despite his intention to spend his life alone, falls in love with Ida and becomes desperate to save her. Their quest leads them to Henry Fuwa, a hermit biologist devoted to preserving the moth-winged bull, a species of insect-sized winged bovines; to Carl Mausen, a friend of Ida's family whose devotion to her mother makes him both ally and enemy; and finally to Emiliana Stallows, who claims to have once cured a girl with Ida's affliction. Each of these characters' histories intertwine, though their motivations surrounding Ida are muddled by their loyalties. Both love story and dirge, Shaw's novel flows gracefully and is wonderfully dreamlike, with the danger of the islands matched by the characters' dark pasts. (Jan.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Review

"Fantastically imagined.... The hybrid form of the book—fairy tale, myth, psychological realism and fantasy—impresses. But Shaw’s most delightful offerings are the vivid details he provides to make the magical real.... As Ida turns to glass, Midas must continue his own transformation, from hardened to human. The end of the book, saturated with color and emotion, is risky and brave like the message it imparts. Only a heart of glass would be unmoved."—Robin Romm, New York Times Book Review

"Ali Shaw has created a memorable addition to [the] fabulist pantheon in his gorgeous first novel, The Girl with Glass Feet.... Over the course of this eerie, bewitching novel, the mixture of love and grief and the imminence of death become as memorable as Ida’s mysterious, dreadful transformation and Midas’s more achingly human one ... Shaw acknowledges the influence of writers like Andersen, Kafka and Borges (Shaw's menagerie of perfectly detailed, marvelous creatures could have stepped from the pages of "The Book of Imaginary Beings"). But it’s Andersen’s melancholy tales, steeped in loss and a brooding sense of fatedness, that shimmer around the edges of The Girl with Glass Feet. Every character in this novel yearns for a love that seems just out of reach: Midas's unhappy parents; Henry Fuwa; Carl Maulsen, who loved Ida's mother; Emiliana, the island woman who might have a cure for Ida's illness; Ida herself—all of them are bound by threads of betrayal and desire and hope, until Fate cuts those threads, calmly and without remorse."—Elizabeth Hand, Washington Post

"The Girl with Glass Feet is a love story, not just about two people falling in love, but also about love itself: its power, its limits, and its consequences.... Although Shaw’s novel is set in the present, everything’s turned askew, resulting in a world that is at once banal—the car won’t start; the coffee’s getting cold—and fantastical—glass feet; glass hearts. Shaw makes the crucial decision to leave the human emotions and relationships in the realm of the believable, while embedding them in terrain that is ever so slightly surreal. Somehow it’s never implausible. Shaw is at his best when describing the fantastical world he’s created. His language manages to be poetic and economical.... The look, the sound, and the scent of St. Hauda’s Land stay with you after turning the last page of this beautiful novel."—Buzzy Jackson, The Boston Globe

"Ali Shaw’s engrossing and moving debut novel ... is a story of a strange land and its strange inhabitants, but at heart it’s a sincere but unsentimental love story.... The joy that Ida and Midas share, after Midas takes those first risky steps toward love, is so beautifully captured that their happiness beats back the drear and shadows.... The dreamy atmosphere curls around you until you see, hear and smell the moors and bogs.... The ending bridges the gap between fairy tales old and new."—Lisa McLendon, Wichita Eagle

"Ali Shaw shows immense promise with his deft use of language, which sings in a book that is at its heart filled with sadness. The soft light on the island plays coyly with the thick vegetation, casting glorious shadows and producing a riot of images all ably captured by Midas’ camera and Shaw’s prose."—Vikram Johri, The Chicago Sun-Times

"Ali Shaw has a gift for storytelling and an obvious love of language. His descriptions are poetic and original.... The Girl With Glass Feet is a work of great imagination and talent. Mr. Shaw never tells us what causes the glassification, but that leaves the reader open to decide whether the tale is merely a modern fairy tale, or whether turning into glass is in itself a metaphor for a larger, human condition that creates change bringing moments of pain and pleasure."—Corinna Lothar, The Washington Times

"The cold northern islands of St. Hauda’s Land are home to strange creatures and intertwining human secrets in Shaw’s earnest, magic-tinged debut.... Both love story and dirge, Shaw’s novel flows gracefully and is wonderfully dreamlike, with the danger of the islands matched by the characters’ dark pasts."—Publishers Weekly

"Ali Shaw offers the rare delight of a world freshly and richly imagined.... The story is soothingly spellbinding, pulling the reader with steady delicacy into the hearts and minds of its characters amid the enthralling murmur of the fantastical."—Ariel Berg, The San Francisco Book Review

“On the surface, the book is magical, seemingly as transparent as Ida's toes. Like all the best fairy tales, though, it's tinted with a pervading sense of unease that sticks with the reader long after the cover is closed. Midas's love for a woman who is leaving the real world he despises, Ida's lost grip on humanity, the very land on which they meet, are all deeper and darker than they seem, making this a book well worth reading.”—BookSlut.com

"This lovely fable is a chain of linked mysteries with accelerating suspense that propels the reader deep into Shaw’s world of marvels. That world is crafted with elegance and swept by passionate magic and the yearning for connection. A rare pleasure."—Katherine Dunn, author of Geek Love

"Written in the tradition of magical realists like Haruki Murakami and Gabriel Garcia Marquez, The Girl with Glass Feet is a singular, slippery narrative that defies easy categorization. Shaw writes finely honed prose and knows how to wring maximum suspense out of a tightly woven plot. His is an accomplished first novel—a hypnotic book with an atmosphere all its own."—Julie Hale, Bookpage

"Emotional entanglements on a faraway frozen island are shaped by romance and tragedy in a melancholic yet whimsical British debut.... [A] strikingly visual novel.... captivatingly ethereal."—Kirkus Reviews

"The Girl with Glass Feet is weirdly beautiful and highly entertaining." —Minneapolis Star Tribune

"Shaw has worked the great tradition of European fairy tales and come up with an ingenious story ... A magical fable of fate and resignation."—The Guardian (UK)

"The Girl with Glass Feet is not just special—it’s remarkable.... [This] debut novel conjures up the extraordinary and fantastic, yet places it firmly in our digital world.... It’s a very visual novel—readers who enjoy using their imagination will adore it."—Helen Peacock, The Oxford Times (UK)

"A haunting and magical tale.... One of the most original and memorable love stories I’ve read in a long time.... It takes a real talent to create such an imaginative setting yet still make readers believe and care about the characters, but first-time novelist Ali Shaw pulls it off in dazzling style, spinning an unforgettable story so vividly described that the reader is only too willing to suspend disbelief in order to be transported into his sad and lovely world."—Morag Lindsay, Aberdeen Press and Journal


Product Details

  • Paperback: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Picador (January 4, 2011)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0312680457
  • ISBN-13: 978-0312680459
  • Product Dimensions: 8.2 x 5.6 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 9.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (53 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #455,750 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

A very imaginative story well told. Bluestalking Reader  |  12 reviewers made a similar statement
Instead it is a very strange and dark love story between Ida and Midas and the people in their lives. Melissa Books and Things  |  5 reviewers made a similar statement
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
16 of 19 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars The Girl with Glass Feet October 24, 2009
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
Plot Summary:
St. Hauda's is a cold island way up north where narwhal fishing used to be the trade of choice. Once that was banned, most of the population left and the island is now dull, quiet and secluded. This is perfectly fine with Midas Crook, who doesn't like being around too many people and certainly doesn't like touching them. He prefers, instead, to view the world through his camera and make sense of it that way. Ida MacLaird comes to St. Hauda's Land hoping for a cure to her strange illness. Her feet have turned to glass and the illness seems to be spreading up her body. She comes to St. Hauda's looking for Henry Fuwe, a man she met on her last trip there who told her about tiny flying cows, an animal that turns everything it looks at to white, and glass people sunk into bogs. She meets Midas instead, and the two become friends, deepening into something more. The two embark on a mission to save Ida, aided in part by Carl Maulson, who used to be in love with Ida's mother and work with Midas' father. But even as they try to find a cure, the glass in Ida's body keeps creeping up...

My Thoughts:
This was a beautifully written book. There were so many interlocking stories, all about relationships and love lost and found. Ida and Midas are in the center (I wonder if their names are similar for a reason). Ida wants desperately to connect with someone before her illness leaves her cold, literally. Midas is drawn to Ida, but he must overcome his innate dislike of touching or even really interacting with other people.

Their relationship is central to the plot, but there are so many others similar to it that reach different conclusions. Each relationship presented in the story represents and symbolizes a different version of love, and it's fascinating to see how Shaw weaves the illness of bodies turning to glass into all of it.

I really enjoyed both Ida and Midas as characters. Ida was so strong and faced her problems head-on. Even though she has a seemingly incurable illness, she goes after what she wants and refuses to cater to anyone else. Midas, too, grows so much during the novel, from a shy, socially awkward person always frightened that he will turn out like his father, into a man who stands up for himself and takes risks even when they terrify him.

This book reminded me, atmosphere-wise, of A Winter's Tale. Everything is black and white and cold. It had the same fantastical elements present- they are alluded to, but never really explained. I would have preferred a bit more closure around the more minor plot points, but I can see why Shaw left them out. I wish he had also left out just a few instances of characters saying the word, "Um," but I will forgive him that :-)

The Girl with Glass Feet is a slow, sad novel that meanders around an isolated island. I think you have to be in the right mood for it- I read it curled up inside on a miserable rainy day, and that was the perfect setting. Shaw has a gift for descriptive passages, and he's an author I will follow.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Good June 13, 2010
Format:Hardcover
Intense, introverted and grotesque. Small-scale, intense characterization, and at times problematic in the way it shows relationships developing. Still, on the whole I was interested, and some of the sheer metaphysical strangeness (moth-cows, and the titular turning of the main character's feet and then entire body) will probably stay with me.

It works in many ways as a horror account with some unconventional framing. There's a lot of effort to almost downplay the main fantastical happenings, for instance. The awareness of the unfolding transformation isn't really the dramatic focus of the book, rather it's how the change provokes an extended process of acceptance, and how it factors into the main relationships of the main character. That description makes it sound like a sentimental work which it really isn't--the tone is a lot harsher in assessing the characters and the obsession they sometimes have for each other. The larger representation of humanity probably counts as a bleak one, yet the story tone is light enough and there are enough beautiful passages to make for more than a pessimistic representation.

I'm extremely ambivalent on this one, not at the end very clear what the Shaw was aiming for or how effectively he executed it. I can't exactly count it as a good work because of how vague I feel at the end about the larger story, how I can fit different themes equally into interpreting the point behind the story. Including, most troubling, the possibility of a rather sexist authorial viewpoint given the terms by which women consistently appear. It can also be seen as empowering to an extent, and it manages a sustained first person viewpoint of a complex woman with a lot more sympathy than a lot of (male) authors provide. In the end I'm considerably more favorable for this than Cloud and Ashes, as while I'm unsure as to some of the underlying major points the basic story was comprehensible, and rather compelling, and the high quality of the writing felt like an asset rather than something that undermined the narrative. In the end I am glad I read this work, as it provides a very different feel than most fantasy. I may even reread it at some point, as I think it would benefit from more careful consideration.

Worse than: King Rat by China Mieville

Better than: Cloud and Ashes by Greer Gilman
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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Magically, numbed my 'Grey Matter' into glass November 25, 2009
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
Ali Shaw has created a unique, if not confusing, dark fairy tale, that is atmospheric, magical, deeply psychological, and utterly unbelievable. But then, it IS a 'fairy tale.'

Shaw's debut novel is somewhat of a rambling, convoluted fable. The, boy-meets-girl concept, is complicated by the fact that Ida Maclaird is mysteriously turning into glass. Midas Crook, the introverted town local, who prefers to view life from behind his camera, becomes enamoured with Ida---his first experience with emotional and physical intimacy. As love blooms, the two of them set out on an adventurous quest to find a cure for Ida's malady. They encounter a host of complicated characters, all toting dark bags of secrets, that will eventually become intertwined. Along the way they have to watch out for moth-winged, flying bovines, other magical creatures, and a bog cemetery, that all seem somewhat misplaced and never adequately explained. For the most part---they're just there, without enough back-story, to allow the reader to enjoy them, or embrace the fantasy world.

The strong point of this tale is Crook's character development. As we begin to see the free-spirited, kind and loving, Ida, increasingly locked-in by her solidifying infirmity, we see Midas grow, unlock, and open to new possibilities, while finding some closure with unresolved issues of childhood angst. There is tremendous loss and pain, but much is gained, as destiny is fulfilled.

I applaud Shaw for his creativity, finding him a lyrical, word-master, and one to watch for future contributions. However there was too much going on within this tale. The 'magic' and its creatures didn't enhance the love story, but rather seemed to operate parallel, to it, in St. Hauda's Land. I began to feel as though, I had a bad seat at a ten ring circus, leaving me unable to develop a connection with characters, that were never fully fleshed out. I also never fully realized the free-child enjoyment of the magic, which should be communicated with any fairy-tale. After all, young, or old, 'fairy tales' are supposed to take us away to a never, never-land, we will never forget. This one did not quite accomplish this for me. All said, I still regard, 'The Girl with Glass Feet,' as a stellar accomplishment for a first time novelist.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
2.0 out of 5 stars A Good Story is Trapped in this Book
My book club chose to read this book last month. I am so happy to be done with it. There are certainly some good parts in the book. Read more
Published 2 days ago by D. Clark
4.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful, but unsatisfying
On the surface, this is the unusual story of a girl who finds herself living with a disease that is slowly turning her body to glass. But it ends up being much more. Read more
Published 14 days ago by E. Strickenburg
2.0 out of 5 stars Great potential but in the end disappointing
In my opinion and the opinion of the book club, this book left to many loose ends and read like a bunch of short stories that were shuffled together. Read more
Published 1 month ago by danielle Ray
3.0 out of 5 stars Glass and white- cold and inpenetrable
Set in the remote island of St. Hauda in the north, with the former whaling industry gone, the island population has decreased. Read more
Published 11 months ago by Michelle Boytim
3.0 out of 5 stars I started reading with great expectations. Those were filled half...
As many others have commented so far, the book starts intriguing, it has a fairy-tale component, but is staged on a modern day island somewhere on the coast. Read more
Published 16 months ago by Jesse Houwing
3.0 out of 5 stars Over-done but beautiful
Do you know what? I can't decide. Some of the description was BEAUTIFUL. Unique and clever and gorgeous, the kind of words you want to read over and over and savour every clever... Read more
Published 19 months ago by Josie
5.0 out of 5 stars I wish I had written this book!
This book is so gorgeous, so unusual, so breathtaking and imaginative, that I wish I had written it. Read more
Published 20 months ago by Stephanie DeLuca
4.0 out of 5 stars A Gradual Appreciation, Now a Favorite
The cover of The Girl with Glass Feet and the flap copy pretty much lasso'd me into reading this book. My imagination went wild picturing things. Read more
Published 20 months ago by Evie
4.0 out of 5 stars Whimsical read - if you're willing to suspend belief
I picked up a copy of The Girl with the Glass Feet when they were giving them away over at the Amazon Kindle store a few months back, after all who turns down a free book? Read more
Published 22 months ago by Clare Swindlehurst
4.0 out of 5 stars Great Story, Bad Wording
I think the main problem I had with this book is the author's overindulgence in writing pretty description. Read more
Published on February 16, 2011 by Tunisia Dorionne
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