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Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell

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Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell
Black version of the 1st hardcover edition.
AuthorSusanna Clarke
IllustratorPortia Rosenberg
LanguageEnglish
GenreAlternate history, Fantasy
Publisher Bloomsbury UK
Publication date
September 8, 2004
Publication placeUnited Kingdom
Media typePrint (Hardcover & Paperback)
Pages800 pp
ISBNISBN 1-58234-416-7 Parameter error in {{ISBNT}}: invalid character

Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell is the debut novel by British writer Susanna Clarke. It was first published in America on 8 September 2004 and then in Britain on 20 September 2004 by Bloomsbury.

The book is set in an alternate 19th-century Britain, during the Napoleonic Wars. The story is based on the premise of magic returning to England after hundreds of years of desuetude, and the tumultuous relationship between two fictional magicians of the time. The story incorporates historical events and people into its fictional alternate reality. Historical figures encountered in the novel include the Duke of Wellington, Lord Byron and King George III. The novel, written in a pastiche of Jane Austen's literary style, uses quasi-archaic spelling for several words (such as shew, chuse, connexion, sopha, scissars, headach, and surprize).

The book is interspersed with hundreds of fictional footnotes which reference a number of fictional books including magical scholarship and biographies, and which provide a detailed backstory. Many pages of the book contain more footnote text than main body text. The book features several illustrations by Portia Rosenberg.

Major characters

In addition to the historical personages, the reader is introduced to many characters, including:

  • Gilbert Norrell. A cautious, fussy scholar determined to bring magic back to England.
  • Jonathan Strange. Norrell's reckless and brilliant pupil, as well as England's greatest weapon against Napoleon.
  • John Segundus. A theoretical magician (meaning someone who studies magic but does not attempt to, or can not, make it work) who, along with Mr. Honeyfoot, first meets Mr. Norrell and convinces the Society of York to "test" him, which draws him into the public's eye.
  • Mr. Honeyfoot. A theoretical magician of the York Society who befriends Segundus.
  • Dr. Foxcastle. A theoretical magician and head of the York Society. He and the rest of the Society are ultimately humiliated by Norrell when they defy him to prove his magic.
  • John Childermass. Norrell's cunning and surly servant.
  • Christopher Drawlight. A fop of notoriously uncertain character who assists the scholarly Norrell in his bid to influence the politicians of London. Effeminate, unctuous but ultimately a petty criminal.
  • Henry Lascelles. Drawlight's companion and rival. Handsome, wealthy and cynical.
  • Vinculus. A ragged, drunken street-magician.
  • Arabella Strange. The wife of Jonathan Strange. Proud of her husband and tolerant of his idiosyncrasies.
  • Henry Woodhope. Arabella's brother, a clergyman who is generally distrustful of magic and its practitioners.
  • Sir Walter Pole. Lady Pole's husband, a government minister who becomes a patron to Norrell and Strange.
  • Lady Emma Pole. Sir Walter's young wife, a beautiful young woman who is raised from the dead by the magic of Norrell and a deal with the gentleman with thistle-down hair in exchange for half of her life.
  • Stephen Black. A black servant in the Pole household, of kingly countenance and carriage. Enchanted by the gentleman with thistle-down hair, forcing him to attend balls at "Lost-Hope".
  • Flora Greysteel. A young English lady Strange meets while vacationing in Italy.
  • Doctor Lancelot Greysteel. Flora's father, a physician.
  • Louisa Greysteel. Lancelot's spinster sister.
  • The gentleman with thistle-down hair. The story's villain. The fairy king of "Lost-Hope", whose name is never given. Charming and gentlemanly, but also psychopathically cruel. He has almost no regard for anyone but himself and Stephen Black, to whom he takes a great liking.
  • John Uskglass, The Raven King. The shadowy twelfth-century founder of English magic and ruler of Northern England, from his seat in Newcastle, for more than 300 years. Scorned by Norrell, idolized by Strange and others.

Historical references

At one point in the book, reference is made to the Faerie kingdom of Pity-Me. This is in fact a real place in County Durham, North East England. Clarke was living in County Durham in 1992, when she started writing the novel.

In the book the King, afflicted with madness, is in the care of a pair of doctors called the "Willises." These characters are based on George III's actual physician Dr. Francis Willis. However the portrayal of his treatment and his relationship with the doctor(s) are closer to how they are characterized in the play The Madness of King George than they are to the actual events.

Historical figures encountered in the book, either directly or in passing, include:

Awards and nominations

The novel has been awarded the Hugo and World Fantasy Awards for Best novel, both in 2005. It was also longlisted for the 2004 Man Booker Prize, nominated for the 2004 Whitbread First Novel Award and Guardian First Book Award.

The novel is also a New York Times and Sunday Times bestseller. Time Magazine named it the best novel of 2004[1].

Critical acclaim from fellow authors includes Neil Gaiman, who said the book was "unquestionably the finest English novel of the fantastic written in the last seventy years", and Charles Palliser, author of the similarly grand-scale, Victorian-set The Quincunx, who praised the book's depth of invented background; "I almost began to believe that there really was a tradition of 'English magic' that I had not heard about."

Film

Christopher Hampton is adapting the book as a motion picture for New Line Cinema. Clarke has partnered with newly formed Cuba Pictures to produce the film.

Susanna Clarke's short-story collection The Ladies of Grace Adieu and Other Stories features stories set in the world of Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell.

History and Practice of Magic by Paul Christian, which was first published in 1881 and has been reprinted numerous times, appears to be one of Clarke's sources on magic. The original edition included detailed accounts of folk beliefs about mystery schools and initiatory rites, discussing ceremonial magic and witchcraft, as well as divination through astrology and tarot (and esoteric beliefs about same). Clarke also seems to have used Eliphas Levi's History of Magic, another 19th century work, originally published in French.

The book's cover features a blurb by Neil Gaiman, who is also responsible for Clarke's first publication - he introduced Patrick Nielsen Hayden to a short story set in the same universe, which was subsequently included in the anthology Starlight 1.

Certain parallels may also be drawn with speculative fiction authors such as Michael Moorcock and Jack Vance. Like her, these authors have played with the conventions of 19th and early 20th century culture. (A minor character called Moorcock actually appears in Clarke's book.)

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