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Gillespie and I: A Novel por Jane Harris
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Gillespie and I: A Novel (edición 2012)

por Jane Harris

MiembrosReseñasPopularidadValoración promediaConversaciones / Menciones
7337230,864 (3.96)1 / 424
As she sits in her Bloomsbury home with her two pet birds for company, elderly Harriet Baxter recounts the story of her friendship with Ned Gillespie--a talented artist whose life came to a tragic end before he ever achieved the fame and recognition that Harriet maintains he deserved. In 1888, young Harriet arrives in Glasgow during the International Exhibition. After a chance encounter with Ned, she befriends the Gillespie family and soon becomes a fixture in their lives. But when tragedy strikes, culminating in a notorious criminal trial, the certainty of Harriet's new world rapidly spirals into suspicion and despair.… (más)
Miembro:Nanette70
Título:Gillespie and I: A Novel
Autores:Jane Harris
Información:Harper Perennial (2012), Edition: Reprint, Paperback, 528 pages
Colecciones:Tu biblioteca
Valoración:
Etiquetas:Ninguno

Información de la obra

Gillespie and I por Jane Harris

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 Orange January/July: Gillespie and I by Jane Harris27 no leídos / 27Her_Royal_Orangeness, septiembre 2012

» Ver también 424 menciones

Inglés (69)  Catalán (1)  Italiano (1)  Todos los idiomas (71)
Mostrando 1-5 de 71 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
This expansive novel follows Harriet Baxter, as an aging woman in 1933 and her younger self in Glasgow in 1888. It tracks her relationship with an artist named Ned Gillespie, and his family. She becomes very attached to all of them. After a tragedy occurs, Harriet finds herself in the center of a notorious criminal trial. I was surprised how much I enjoyed this book. The writing is very good and the characters are well drawn. ( )
  msf59 | Jul 23, 2022 |
I find something so cozy about reading a chunky historical fiction during the colder months. You can just wrap up in a blanket, have a hot drink nearby, and just lose yourself in it.

Even if it turns out to be not so nice.

Gillespie and I is one of those books that I find difficult to talk about because too much information would spoil it. So I'll just start with this:

Harriet Baxter is an elderly spinster living in London in the 1930's. She has taken it upon herself to write her memoirs, specifically about the period she was acquainted with Ned Gillespie, a forgotten Scottish artist and - according to Harriet, an unfairly neglected genius. Part of the reason for Gillespie's obscurity is that he destroyed most of his work before tragically taking his own life. Harriet describes him as her "dear friend and soul mate," revealing that she was closest to him and knew him better than members of his own family. She then looks back to the spring of 1888, when she first met Gillespie and his family at the International Exhibition in Glasgow.

And I'll say no more for now.

At first, this novel reads like something like [b:The Remains of the Day|28921|The Remains of the Day|Kazuo Ishiguro|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1327128714s/28921.jpg|3333111] - as the story unfolds, the reader notices flaws and quirks that the narrator stays blissfully unaware of. For instance, Harriet considers herself a kind and generous person. But she can be quite cruel in her descriptions of others - Ned's sister, for instance, would be quite a beauty if her jaw did not "put one in mind of a frying pan." This streak of nastiness running through Harriet's narration hints at more sinister things to come. If you liked [b:The Little Stranger|7234875|The Little Stranger|Sarah Waters|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1407105269s/7234875.jpg|5769396], you will enjoy Gillespie and I. ( )
  doryfish | Jan 29, 2022 |
I have just this minute finished this book.

It is beautiful. It is deft. It is as well-constructed as anything I have read. It is thrilling. It has no easy answers. It is funny. It is, at times, cruel. It makes me despair that I have never visited Glasgow, and it makes me want to write more carefully, because it was obviously done with such great attention to its craft.

It's a really, really, really good book. ( )
  lloydshep | Nov 4, 2021 |
It's hard to write a review of this book without giving away too much. At first it seems to be a fairly average Victorianesque novel with a maybe a whiff of family scandal in the offing. In fact about a quarter of the way in I began to wonder what all the great reviews were about. Then there was a little detail that seemed a bit strange. And another. Before you quite realize it things have taken a definite turn, and it becomes clear this is not the story that you thought you were reading. ( )
  riemerreads | Jul 10, 2021 |
Loved this book. The characters, especially the character of Harriet. This becomes a creepy story and one wonders if it is a tale of evil or self delusion. very enjoyable ( )
  scot2 | Nov 26, 2020 |
Mostrando 1-5 de 71 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
Like The Observations, Gillespie and I is, at heart, a book about loneliness and obsessive love. If The Observations drew on Gothic romance and sensation fiction for its inspiration, Gillespie and I follows the tradition of Henry James, using the first-person narrator to explore questions of consciousness and perception....From the vantage point of the 1930s Harriet writes enviously of the freedoms of the modern woman – her right to vote, to work, to own property – but it is the freedom of self-knowledge, the deeper psychological understanding that was to be the legacy of Freud and his peers, that Harriet, as a Victorian woman, lacks most. It is her failure to recognise this that forms the heart of this absorbing novel.
 

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Nombre del autorRolTipo de autor¿Obra?Estado
Jane Harrisautor principaltodas las edicionescalculado
Bentinck, AnnaNarradorautor secundarioalgunas edicionesconfirmado
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It would appear that I am to be the first to write a book on Gillespie.
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As she sits in her Bloomsbury home with her two pet birds for company, elderly Harriet Baxter recounts the story of her friendship with Ned Gillespie--a talented artist whose life came to a tragic end before he ever achieved the fame and recognition that Harriet maintains he deserved. In 1888, young Harriet arrives in Glasgow during the International Exhibition. After a chance encounter with Ned, she befriends the Gillespie family and soon becomes a fixture in their lives. But when tragedy strikes, culminating in a notorious criminal trial, the certainty of Harriet's new world rapidly spirals into suspicion and despair.

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