Reviews

Arthur & George by Julian Barnes

covergirlbooks's review against another edition

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2.0

I initially had high hopes for this novel... a story about the author of Sherlock Holmes involved in solving a real life mystery? But while the problem was intriguing, how do I put this... I was nearly 2/3 through the book by the time the game was truly afoot.

Barnes spends so much time introducing us to the origins of the two protagonists, Arthur Conan Doyle and George Edalji, with the minutiae of their life's work and interests, things that could have been dispensed of in pat sentences were multiple chapters.

One particularly overdone exposition was the nature of Doyle's fascination with psychical practices. Very creepy the theological theories he held to, and the dangerous stuff he was playing with.

There was far too much build up and biographical trivia to keep the momentum of the story. This pedantic pace combined with Barnes' tendency to get caught up in description of every meal, every costume...

Sorry to have wasted my time on this one. I committed to finishing it to find out the ending. It felt like slogging through quicksand, honestly. Ultimately found myself doing some extreme skimming on the last quarter of the book.

If you want a well-crafted novel which imagines Doyle in a sleuthing adventure, I recommend you pick up The Sherlockian by Graham Moore.

helenkat's review against another edition

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4.0

Slow to start in a biographical manner dealing with George and Arthur as children. Followed by the events in their lives until they meet. Angst on both sides - George and his persecution, Arthur loving a woman not his sick wife and the ghost of Sherlock Holmes constantly with him.

Two people who could not have been any different if they tried - loud boisterous Arthur and quiet, systematic George. There is a sadness to both I found.

Themes of injustice, racism, honour, love, preconceptions and spirituality. In part detective novel, in part biography, in part a look at humanity during the Victorian age.

One thing that surprised me was for such a more forward thinking man , Doyle didn't agree with the vote for women (not told if he changed his mind in later life). That did disappoint me. Though I still found myself liking him thanks to his determination to see George cleared of any crimes. He seems a complex man who needed to be active. Needed to have a task or a cause.

I have been slowly reading the Sherlock Holmes stories and so seeing this, I wanted to know a little about his creator.

greebytime's review against another edition

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2.0

Utterly perplexed what the hook is here. The prose was nice but the plot was fairly thin and, I’ll just say it, not really interesting in any real way. I’ve long heard the praises of Julian Barnes but man this was not a great introduction to him for me.

erink87's review against another edition

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challenging informative mysterious reflective medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

3.75


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yhtgrace's review against another edition

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2.0

Meh.

jlrasa23's review

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2.0

It was kind of slow moving and the title was somewhat misleading.

mazza57's review against another edition

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2.0

takes too long to get going spends too long telling what comes after and only a miniscule amount on Doyle's investigation into the events. Not interesting enough

annataeko's review

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3.0

A compelling, factual, character-driven story.
A must-read for all Sherlockians out there!

[tw: animal harm]

anonblueberry's review against another edition

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3.0

I'm ashamed to say this took me well over a year to read. I started it as required reading for a university module, and while I had been hooked on it, I had to put it down so I could get the rest of my reading finished, and so it languished.
That said it was a really interesting and engaging read.

shahrun's review against another edition

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4.0

The subject matter was a fascinating surprise for me. I certainly felt for George, as someone with a similar genetic make up Who is living now I experience much of the same (minus the penal servitude). I used to love reading Sherlock Holmes books as a child, but knew nothing of the author so this book was a great starting point to broaden my knowledge. For subject matter I had no previous experience of, I felt the author did a great job or imagining what went on. It all felt very authentic. It was just a bit dry. I was enjoying reading it but didn’t feel compelled to zip through it.