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Tunneling: A Novel

door Beth Bosworth

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534491,233 (3.42)2
Rachel Finch is twelve years old and in love—not with a neighborhood boy, but with the Dewey decimal system, call numbers and the cellophane covers of library books . . . also with time travel, a superhero she knows only as S-Man and, above all, Franz Kafka. She considers herself a very different young girl—until she makes the acquaintance of a classmate who challenges that sense of otherness. In this utterly inventive debut novel, we are irresistibly drawn into a world where Rachel, who many years later narrates our story, has begun to lead a double life. Severely asthmatic and deemed bookish and delicate by her family, she takes clandestine time-bending excursions with S-Man to rescue some of history’s greatest literary geniuses. Swooping in on Shakespeare, Oscar Wilde and Chinua Achebe, among others, Rachel’s rescue missions are a rollicking ride through literary history, while her day-to-day life in Teaneck, New Jersey, emotively reflects the civil rights movement in 1960s America. Writing with a confidence, intelligence and playfulness rare for a first-time novelist, Beth Bosworth has given us a book brimming with magical realism and boundless imagination, in which literary references, great humor and political consciousness fully blossom into a significance far beyond the grasp of a twelve-year-old girl. Witty and wise, with deftly rendered shadings of the heart, Tunneling is at once boldly fanciful and remarkably down-to-earth.… (meer)
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Toon 4 van 4
I read the first few pages and found I just wasn't getting into it. As my to read pile is huge, I'm going to bring this back to MeetUp and let someone else give it a go.
  amyem58 | Jul 3, 2014 |
Here's the description from the book jacket:

"Rachel Finch is twelve years old and in love … not with a neighborhood boy, but with the Dewey decimal system, call numbers and the cellophane covers of library books . . . also with time travel, a superhero she knows only as S-Man and, above all, Franz Kafka. She considers herself a very different young girl … until she makes the acquaintance of a classmate who challenges that sense of otherness.

In this utterly inventive debut novel, we are irresistibly drawn into a world where Rachel, who many years later narrates our story, has begun to lead a double life. Severely asthmatic and deemed bookish and delicate by her family, she takes clandestine time-bending excursions with S-Man to rescue some of history's greatest literary geniuses. Swooping in on Shakespeare, Oscar Wilde and Chinua Achebe, among others, Rachel's rescue missions are a rollicking ride through literary history, while her day-to-day life in Teaneck, New Jersey, emotively reflects the civil rights movement in 1960s America.

Writing with a confidence, intelligence and playfulness rare for a first-time novelist, Beth Bosworth has given us a book brimming with magical realism and boundless imagination, in which literary references, great humor and political consciousness fully blossom into a significance far beyond the grasp of a twelve-year-old girl. Witty and wise, with deftly rendered shadings of the heart, Tunneling is at once boldly fanciful and remarkably down-to-earth."

This sounds like the ultimate book for me - part Thursday Next, part To Kill a Mockingbird. How can a book with libraries, New Jersey, literary references, and time travel fail to please? Sadly, the uneven writing of this book fails to live up to the wonderful summary. Bosworth seems to be deliberately obtuse in her writing and flits from place to place without allowing the reader to learn or care about what's going on. Instead of being imaginative this book is merely dull, instead of adventurous it is ponderous. I guess I can't criticize a book for not being what I want it to be, but this book just isn't something I liked reading.

"Frankly, I still don't understand why we waste so much time - entire lifetimes - learning things about ourselves that would have been useful a year, a decade, a generation ago." - p. 11 ( )
  Othemts | Jun 25, 2008 |
After finding this on a B&N clearance shelf, I hoped it would be something I could enjoy on the same level as Jasper Fforde's books, which I'd finished. It most definately was not. I'm not saying it's a bad book, just don't go into it with those expectations. The tunnels in the title refer to the tunnels that an asmatic preteen goes through as she day-and-night dreams the adventures denied to her because of her health. Part of the reason for her asthma always acting up is because she constantly retrieves overdue library books hidden under her bed, as she lies on the dusty floorboards. There, she studies the faces of famous writers and imagines herself traveling to different places and times, always accompanied by friend William Shakespeare. Good read. ( )
  Kerian | Jan 11, 2007 |
I'm afraid I haven't read this book yet, but I picked up in Daedalus (a chain remainder bookstore) because the premise sounds fascinating and it was a distinct bonus to find that the copy was also signed.

I've had this since maybe 2006. It's still on my to-read shelf. Every so often, I'll pick it up and promptly set it back down again. I keep saying that I'll get to it someday, but the fact that I still haven't after all this time says something quite strongly.
1 stem | MyriadBooks | Aug 28, 2007 |
Toon 4 van 4
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I was wrapped in his cape and we were flying through the firmament, which was very beautiful and bright and yet perfectly colorless and also great-tasting, and above us burned a flame that shone white and yet not white, as all color has disappeared and with it the desperate confused cruelties of humanity and meanwhile the coelum empyreum and hoards of Angels hovered in an extremely celestial fashion, the Seraphim Cherubim Dominions and Powers all hovered singing praise in perfect pitch and turning their perfectly illumined faces up toward what I could just glimpse to be a fiery and variegated Throne and below us breathed the most resolute perfection of the privmum mobile, I really liked that primum mobile, the way it got things going, and I knew I was safe and then suddenly I was alone and sailing through that unalterable fifth substance, alone and bouncing amongst the fixed stars, alone and crashing through one crystalline sphere after antoher on which hung as if in some renegade sixth-grade science project (I was going into seventh) the giant and terrible planets, Saturn Jupiter Mars and Venus, also Mercury, and as the light waned and the music of these spheres faded from my too-human ears I smashed on through that last sphere and sailed on past the Moon into mutable space, into this realm of mortal sin and all that festers, and I burst helter-skelter into a cold morning sky and went reeling above miniature fields and tiny thatched roofs, and went wheeling arms and legs akimbo into a flock of high-flying honking geese and an embankment of thick cloud, and went tumbling down toward stone belfries and the vaster monasteries and the massive Tower itself, and just as I plummeted toward Bridgegate with its weathered skulls and their mouths like Os, he caught me.
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Rachel Finch is twelve years old and in love—not with a neighborhood boy, but with the Dewey decimal system, call numbers and the cellophane covers of library books . . . also with time travel, a superhero she knows only as S-Man and, above all, Franz Kafka. She considers herself a very different young girl—until she makes the acquaintance of a classmate who challenges that sense of otherness. In this utterly inventive debut novel, we are irresistibly drawn into a world where Rachel, who many years later narrates our story, has begun to lead a double life. Severely asthmatic and deemed bookish and delicate by her family, she takes clandestine time-bending excursions with S-Man to rescue some of history’s greatest literary geniuses. Swooping in on Shakespeare, Oscar Wilde and Chinua Achebe, among others, Rachel’s rescue missions are a rollicking ride through literary history, while her day-to-day life in Teaneck, New Jersey, emotively reflects the civil rights movement in 1960s America. Writing with a confidence, intelligence and playfulness rare for a first-time novelist, Beth Bosworth has given us a book brimming with magical realism and boundless imagination, in which literary references, great humor and political consciousness fully blossom into a significance far beyond the grasp of a twelve-year-old girl. Witty and wise, with deftly rendered shadings of the heart, Tunneling is at once boldly fanciful and remarkably down-to-earth.

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