124 reviews for:

Stone's Fall

Iain Pears

3.75 AVERAGE

seeminglyrob's profile picture

seeminglyrob's review

5.0

Pears has quickly become my favorite contemporary author. This work examines the link between human weakness and the role it plays in events that take place on a global scale. I suppose in that vein it's reminiscent of Tolstoy, though the comparisons should probably stop there. Immensely enjoyable, and, as all great books, this will give you a slight glimpse into your own vulnerabilities.
soapyjo's profile picture

soapyjo's review

3.0

Its good and intriguing but I did guess the twist half way thorough which slightly took the edge off. Despite that Pears' book is hooking and atmospheric and i liked the reverse chronology spiraling back further and further into the past.

Set in the era when spies were frowned upon, traces the life of John Stone, financier and industrialist.
gailgrantpark's profile picture

gailgrantpark's review

4.0

Almost as complicated as Instance of the Fingerpost; a more satisfying ending. Well crafted. Ian Pears is one of my favorite authors, but be warned that it takes some time and concentration to read him (unless you are reading his lighter, artwork/detective mysteries, which are very quick reads).
adventurous mysterious
thefuz23's profile picture

thefuz23's review

2.0

Sadly, I couldn't even finish this book. Historical fiction is not typically a genre I enjoy, but I've read a few lately that have given me hope. This book did not and for a simple reason - it is much too long. The unimportant details bored me to tears, and while I believe those were put in as a way to hide the true clues, a more direct thriller would have been much more enjoyable. I read a spoiler of the ending, and perhaps if I read through to the end I'd have more of a positive feeling about it. But since I did not, it comes off as cheap. I'm sad I didn't enjoy this book more.
janegrey1553's profile picture

janegrey1553's review

2.0

I borrowed this book a few years ago and it didn't suck me in with the first 20-30 pages, so I returned it. But it has been so highly reviewed for so long that I decided to try again, this time on audio book.
I'm about halfway through (11/25 hrs) and ready to give up. I'm so bored! The intricacies of the business dealings I'm sure are well-done and fascinating to some, but a 45-min commute taken up by an exposition of the brilliance of building an arms empire just isn't doing it for me. And I feel like the characters are caricatures/cliches, and are becoming more so. I just looked thought the reviews and got the gist that there are two more parts to come, but even seeing the general areas where it's headed, I just don't care. Moving on!

I'm glad I received Stone's Fall at a recent CBC Books trivia night! I dove into this hefty tome looking for some light, enjoyable reading and that's what I got. I would describe the story as historical mystery with a little suspense thrown in. We begin the onion-like story in London 1909: an incredibly wealthy financier, John Stone, has been found dead. His widow hires a journalist to ostensbily write her husband's biography, but in fact ferret out a mystery revealed Stone's will. As the search commences, more is revealed about Stone's life and rise to wealth, but we are really left with more questions than answers. The second part travels back in place and time to Paris 1890s and follows the life of a British spy introduced in the first part and his connection to Stone. Finally, the last part is Stone's narrative in Venice 1868, where many more questions are his life are answered.

I said the story was onion-like, and I applaud Iain Pears for his effective narrative that slowly reveals more and more about Stone's life and all the characters along the way, but by going back in time! I wasn't expecting to be so surprised by the very end. I won't spoil the plot, so just to say that I thought I had everything figured out, but the final two pages threw in a twist I was not expecting at all.

katrinajr's review

4.0

A bit slow and complex, but worth it if you hang in there.

4.5, Literary, suspenseful, well paced, daunting, daring, dashing, you'll like it.