Little, Big: or, The Fairies' Parliament
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Edgewood - which is not found on any map - is many houses, all put inside each other or across each other. It’s filled with and surrounded by mystery and enchantment; the further in you go, the bigger it gets.
Smoky Barnable, who has fallen in love with Daily Alice Drinkwater, travels from the City on foot to Edgewood, her family home. There he finds himself on the magical border of an otherworld.
Crowley’s work has a special alchemy - mixing the world we know with an imagined world that seems more true and real. Winner of the World Fantasy Award, Little, Big is elegant, sensual, funny, and unforgettable. It is a story of fantastic love and heartrending loss, of impossible things and unshakable destinies, and of the great Tale that envelops us all. It is a wonder.
John Crowley is an American writer who has also worked in television and documentary films. His fantasy and science fiction have established him as a major voice in imaginative writing. His other novels include The Deep, Engine Summer, and Ægypt.
- Listening Length24 hours and 35 minutes
- Audible release dateDecember 9, 2011
- LanguageEnglish
- ASINB006K4Z3K2
- VersionUnabridged
- Program TypeAudiobook
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Product details
| Listening Length | 24 hours and 35 minutes |
|---|---|
| Author | John Crowley |
| Narrator | John Crowley |
| Whispersync for Voice | Ready |
| Audible.com Release Date | December 09, 2011 |
| Publisher | Blackstone Audio, Inc. |
| Program Type | Audiobook |
| Version | Unabridged |
| Language | English |
| ASIN | B006K4Z3K2 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #57,541 in Audible Books & Originals (See Top 100 in Audible Books & Originals) #1,030 in Fantasy Romance (Audible Books & Originals) #6,899 in Fantasy Romance (Books) |
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What is the Tale? On the surface, it is something a mysterious old woman named Mrs. Underhill may have mentioned to Alice's great grandmother Violet Bramble. It was understood that the Tale involved the family of Violet and her architect husband John Drinkwater, and it wouldn't end for quite some time. LITTLE, BIG tells the story of 4 generations of this family in lavish, beautifully descriptive prose. Part of the plot also involves a distant cousin of the family named Ariel Hawksquill and a sinister individual named Russell Eigenblick. Both will have their own important parts to play in the Tale. A good portion of the story takes place in Edgewood, which is represented by a very unusual house, designed and built by Violet's husband John, and located somewhere in the Northeast countryside (upstate NY?). Edgewood was built not merely to serve as a residence (a quite disorienting one at that), but as a way station between this dimension and the dimension of Faerie. It exists on the "edge" of the 2 realities. Edgewood is actually one of the main characters in the novel, and it's purpose is made clearer at the end of the book. Parts of the story also take place in the Great City (NYC), where Smokey and Alice's son Auberon (named after a great uncle) goes to play his role in the Tale. Auberon's journey is one of self discovery, in which he finds love, then loses it and almost loses his sanity in the aftermath. Crowley is wonderful at drawing parallels between things. In one instance he mentions a time when the Woods were wild and fearsome. Now the Woods are peaceful, and the city is in actuality, the Wild Wood. Smokey journeys from the wild city to the peaceful woods to marry and unwittingly becomes part of something greater and more profound than his humdrum reality, while years later, his only son does the reverse to escape the meaninglessness of his own existence and unwittingly fulfill his own destiny. Beautiful symmetry abounds in this novel. A recurring theme involves the seasons. Each season has a symbolic significance in the novel, and key sections of the narrative have plot elements that reflect the season in which they occur. There are many subtle and clever devices Crowley employs to foreshadow events in the novel. A charming scene in a subway tunnel between Auberon and his lover Sylvie, anticipates future events. Near the end, even something as simple as Smokey reaching for a copy of Ovid's Metamorphosis has a portentous significance which in an offhanded way underscores the Tale's mythic nature.
LITTLE, BIG consists of 6 books, divided by 26 chapters headed by epigrams from famous philosophers and literary figures like Cicero, Samuel Johnson, and Virginia Woolf; further subdivided into sections with titles crystallizing thoughts presented in each section. This process of subdivision, rather than confusing the reader, allows one to draw a breath and absorb what is presented without getting mentally exhausted. It's necessary, because Crowley's writing often flaunts his erudition. He'll embellish passages with words that send you scrambling for the dictionary. This may not be a style of writing that pleases everyone, but for this novel I think it's effective. The story held my interest from the beginning, further piqued my curiosity as it progressed, and built anticipation to a crescendo which culminated in a tearful, yet truly sublime ending.
Crowley does more than just tell a wonderful story. A fascinating sidelight is the presentation of certain philosophical elements.. historically controversial visions of reality which have seldom been presented in such a beautiful and imaginative way. There are elements of Gnosticism in the Tale; an attempt to link the spiritual with the rational. It brings to mind Hamlet's words to his rational buddy, "There are more things on heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy". Whether or not Mr. Crowley is a proponent of, or even believes in such notions is not for me to surmise, although I 'm more inclined to think that the Gnostic and Hermetic ideas are used more as plot devices to flesh out the crucial emotional underpinnings of the story, rather than serve as major thematic components. Smokey represents to me, the rational, pragmatic, reasonable world. Alice and her family, the link to the world of spirit and wonder and imagination. The 2 must join together for the Tale to proceed, just as man must recognize his spiritual as well as rational nature. Smokey's life has little value at the start, but ends with a supreme personal fulfillment. The novel describes concentric levels of reality, the deeper in you travel, the more spacious it becomes. Man lives on one level. The faeries on a deeper level. Who knows what exists on levels further in? Carl Jung, in accord with Gnostic and Hermetic sources, describes man as a unique link between the microcosm (Little) and the macrocosm (Big), a portal so to speak, between 2 eternities, one inner and the other outer. The notion presented in the novel of alternative universes is not strictly proprietary to metaphysics. It has been a valid topic of debate in advanced physics. The notion of death in this book is not a fearful notion. Everything we are made of, including our consciousness, has always existed, and will always exist in one form or other for eternity. The deep thoughts are there, but they do not take away from the things in the novel that have primary importance for us as humans who live in the real world and don't pay much thought to alternative realities.
In trying to compare LITTLE, BIG to other works of similar style, I am reminded a bit of One Hundred Years of Solitude, by Garcia Marquez. Both novels make reference to occultism and hermeticism. Both novels contain family trees, and relate unusual family histories through several generations.. but where the Colombian master's Buendia family were almost impossible for me to relate to, Crowley creates characters that are very easy to empathize with. They live and breathe, love and ache, undergo physical, emotional, and spiritual changes, and act all too human even when they become more or less than human. They resonate in your consciousness long after you finish the book. At least they did in mine. I highly recommend this book, and hope more people get to discover it's wonders. Like all great books, this one demands multiple readings. Great books are life experiences..journeys of self discovery, always there to be travelled, each successive venture leading us down more scenic routes to our destination. With LITTLE, BIG Crowley has fashioned his own Edgewood for the reader. We enter through the gates and proceed to a familiar world, one we all know, but nonetheless, a world ripe with mystery, enchantment, and some danger. There are puzzles to solve, and once solved, new ones arise to challenge us. Questions are asked, and once answered, new ones posed for pondering. The world we thought we knew changes into a new world. We leave with new insights, and perhaps a new world view, part of ourselves changed forever as we perceive life from an altered perspective. It may only have been a tale, but it had become our tale. We lived it along with the characters. The experience was just as meaningful for us as for them.
The story begins with Smoky Barnable, an "anonymous" young man who is walking from the big city (unnamed but most obviously New York) to a house upstate called Edgewood where his fiancée, Daily Alice Drinkwater, lives, so they can be married. Smoky's and Alice's pasts are very different, but have been destined to come together to make a new life together. What Smoky does not fully realize (though Alice does more) is that he and this marriage are part of The Tale, a long, long story concerning members of this family he is about to marry into, that has been told for generations; Smokey and Alice's marriage and what follows are only the latest chapters. The Tale involves fantastical beings, strange houses, odd situations, and the details are best left for the reader to discover rather than discuss in this review. Let me say only that the Tale gets told in ways that can lift your heart high or break it, and Smoky is only the beginning of this accounting of it. The rest will not fail to engage you in its beauty and its poetry.
Crowley has crafted a truly incredible story, one that cannot be easily forgotten once finished. It's an adult fairy tale, a multi-generational story about a family, marriage, love, heartbreak and consequences, and even a historically accurate accounting of the history of magic. It's enduring. Extraordinary. A Tale I have read so many times over again I've lost count. And absolutely my most favorite book ever written, bar none.
If you like it, it's a great precursor to his four-volume set known as the Aegypt tetralogy--which continues some of the same ideas and incidents mentioned in this book into a different in-depth study about history and magic, with characters that are also exceptional and poignant. That is a completely different story, but also in many ways the same for it continues one of the threads in Little, Big into a multi-branching ensemble of concepts, history and philosophies. But the Aegypt cycle is not this story, not yet.
Crowley is a storyteller that deserves to be exalted for his knowledge, his understanding and his ability to weave the past into the present in ways that take the reader down roads and into places he or she might never have known existed but for these tales. Mostly, however, Crowley is a writer who is an absolutely master of the craft. His ability is so expert that it can leave the reader breathless with admiration. It is my opinion as a reader and a writer that there is no better writer alive today. Everything I've ever read by Crowley is a masterpiece.















