Imajica Audiolibro Por Clive Barker arte de portada

Imajica

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Imajica

De: Clive Barker
Narrado por: Simon Vance
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Imajica is an epic beyond compare: vast in conception, obsessively detailed in execution, and apocalyptic in its resolution. At its heart lies the sensualist and master art forger Gentle, whose life unravels when he encounters Judith Odell, whose power to influence the destinies of men is vaster than she knows, and Pie "oh" pah, an alien assassin who comes from a hidden dimension.

That dimension is one of five in the great system called Imajica. They are worlds that are utterly unlike our own but are ruled, peopled, and haunted by species whose lives are intricately connected with ours. As Gentle, Judith, and Pie "oh" pah travel the Imajica, they uncover a trail of crimes and intimate betrayals, leading them to a revelation so startling that it changes reality forever.

©1991, 2009 Clive Barker Ink (P)2015 David N. Wilson
Ciencia Ficción Fantasía Ficción Alucinante Sincero Aterrador
Imaginative Worldbuilding • Complex Characters • Philosophical Themes • Vivid Descriptions • Epic Fantasy

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This sweeping novel takes the reader on a fantastical ride through dimensions and the lives of intriguingly genuine characters.

Elegantly told, Barker's larger than life characters enchant and entertain.

Imajica is full of adventure, love, lust, power, greed and betrayal.

I listened to the audio-book and although getting through the book was an arduous task because of the length, the narrator did an excellent job conveying the characters, inflections, and keeping the story flowing.

I would recommend reading a physical copy just for the ease of referencing a previous chapter, reflecting and so on.

I did get distracted by the scope of this novel at times.

Imajica is full of adventure, love, lust, power, g

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"He'd spent many lazy Yzordderrexian evenings on the roof of Peccable's house, watching the tail of the comet disappear behind the towers of the Autarch's palace, talking about the theory and practice of Imajical feits, writs, pneumas, uredos, and the rest."

The first time I began Clive Barker's epic fantasy novel Imajica (1991), I gave up after the third chapter. Why? Because I found the characters too unappealing for so a long book. It begins with Londoners John "Gentle" Zachariah Fury, a gifted forger of art and seducer of women, and Judith Odell, a beautiful woman whose occupation seems to be getting older, overweight, and wealthy men to fall possessively in love with her. But several months later I re-entered Imajica, persevered, started really liking Gentle and Judith as they began experiencing, learning, and changing, and ended up seduced by Barker's ambitious fantasy.

Barker's fertile imagination is by turns gruesome, sublime, beautiful, suspenseful, erotic, apocalyptic, magical, and comical. His fantasy develops his themes (about religion, drama, gender, love, freedom/servitude, reconciliation, transformation, responsibility, memory, identity) and feels relevant due to its philosophical ideas (e.g., everything from a mote to godhead being connected), political thrust (e.g., empire-building male elites feeling threatened), and mundane details (e.g., on the eve of Armageddon Judith shopping for deodorant).

The Imajica is "a single, infinitely elaborate pattern of transformation" comprised of five Dominions, of which earth, the Fifth, is "hard and unpoetic" and "unreconciled," cut off from the magical others, except for a few "despairing or inspired" magicians, poets, priests, etc., the vast majority of humanity being blind to the wonders next door. The plot concerns the coming 200th-midsummer anniversary of the Maestro Sartori's cataclysmically misfiring spell-ritual attempt to Reconcile earth with the other four Dominions. As the novel develops, Gentle and Judith are caught up in the conflict to prevent or foment a new attempt at Reconciliation. Lurking behind everything is "the Unbeheld Himself, Hapexamendios," the God of the Imajica, who long ago went through the Dominions killing deities (especially goddesses), until he got to the First, where he hid behind a veil and shut dead souls out.

While Gentle and Judith become interesting, the supporting characters are compelling: Charlie Estabrook and Oscar Godolphin (aristocratic brothers subject to toxic sibling rivalry), Kuttner Dowd (an urbane "divine pimp, perennial servant . . . actor chappie, and occasional murderer"), the Autarch of the Imajica (a builder of cities and committer of atrocities), Celestine (a former "bride of God" imprisoned in a cell for centuries), Little Ease (a simian cherub "chatterbox" hailing from a race of "apologists, bumblers, deserters, and cowards")--and above all the marvelous Pie 'oh' pah (a centuries-old protean androgyne assassin/whore/slave). After committing terrible crimes Barker's complex people may reveal a sympathetic vulnerability, and after taking responsibility for their actions they may make an appalling mistake.

Barker writes many scenes of potent fantasy, as when Gentle looks across a valley and senses the gaze of a double, or Gentle, Pie, and Huzzah arrive at Yzordderrex, or Celestine tells the circular story of Nisi Nirvana. For all his fantastic imagination (Nullianacs, the Pivot, the City of God, etc.), he remains socially aware. Clem and Taylor and AIDS could be a token gay situation played for a few tears and forgotten, but it becomes a plot engine and gives the fantasy novel a romantic and realistic core.

Barker's painterly, elegant, and versatile writing is a pleasure to re-read:

--"Such dust, every mote as wise as a planet from floating in this holy space."
--"Children wore ash today, and carried their parents' heads like censers, still smoking from the fires where they'd been found."
--"Amid the foliage on the higher branches were clusters of comet-ripened fruit, like zebra tangerines."
--"It made a laugh from its lightening, but there was more humor in a death rattle."
--"Consciousness went from him, and, uncaptained, he sank."

And his irrepressible humor is quite funny, whether in clever dialogue ("Death's put some strange ideas in my head") or witty descriptions ("Everywhere along the route faces were once more appearing at windows and doors like anemones showing themselves after being brushed by the underbelly of a shark").

Audiobook reader Simon Vance's silky voice and refined British accent are perfect for Barker's poetic and decadent fantasy. The majority of Vance's character voices are fine. His dusty, insane Celestine is wonderful; his superior, insecure Unbeheld unsettling; and his exotic, androgynous Pie appealing.

Flaws? Some mysteries remain unsolved at the end. And I wonder, why five Dominions instead of two or four? (Although the Fifth and the First are distinct, the middle three are confusable.) And Barker's early sales pitch for the Dominions ("teeming with wonders") may oversell them.

But his book is an impressive paean to the imagination (a Dominions curse is "May everything be as it seems to you"), magic ("the first and last religion of the world"), the unfettered spirit (religious readers may find the novel disturbing), and love (Imajica features as much graphic sex as violence, unlike most epic fantasy). The amnesia devices and exotic cultures recall Silverberg's Lord Valentine's Castle, the painterly descriptions evoke Peake's Gormenghast, and the assault on organized religion (and a male God) prefigures Pullman's His Dark Materials, but Imajica is Barker's own vision. Imajica is a spiritual and romantic epic fantasy, not a military epic one, being closer to Lindsay's A Voyage to Arcturus than to Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings. Barker's quest is not to save the world from darkness or tyranny via violence, but to enrich the world by becoming a more understanding, caring, and imaginative person.

The Transformative "Assault of the Strange"

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The Narrator read for the near 40 hrs with a consistency of characters and tempo. I enjoyed the interpretation of characters.
The story is fantastic. Knowing the meaning of Nivi Nirvana as words both in Inuit, and Hindi, makes a full understanding of the transformation of the 3rd dominion, and the meaning behind the first dominion.
I am left wondering about how Quasar ended up with the doppelganger Sartori, instead of remaining with Gentle. It isn't explained in a memorable way.
This is an Audiobook that can be revisited many times, and more can be understood or interpreted with each listening. I am glad I own it.

what a world

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If you don't mind the narrator mixing up the character's voices and a vocal range of an amateur this might be the listen for you. As an avid Clive Barker superfan I'm disappointed.

great book, bad narration

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I really wanted to like this book. I had heard good things about it and given the summary id heard, it seemed like it was up my alley. At the end, unfortunately I can only say it was meh at best. The beginning was quite interesting, but as soon as Act II began, the story began to fall off, and by Act III had really fallen short. Though I can appreciate a meandering book, that necessitates the journey we go through along the way must be solid enough to justify the extra time we're taking.

MAJOR SPOILERS AHEAD!!!

After Gentle and Pi Oh Pah enter the Imajica, and our perspective becomes split between Judith and Gentle's stories, the story begins to seriously drag. Though Gentle's side of the story as he and his companion travel through the Fourth, Third, and Second Dominions is interesting enough that the slower pace there feels justified, Judith's end as she deals with relationship drama in her own quest to enter the Imajica just can't quite carry itself. Not quite bad, but a touch irritating.

But the start of Act III is where the book truly feels like it drops off. Once Pi dies, the pacing takes a nose dive. Though the goal Gentle must push forward towards is clear, the constant delays and meanderings we face as an audience simply tank the pacing. Neither Judith nor Gentle's stories felt like they had any momentum anymore, and it became a matter of just bearing through the slog. So many of the plot threads that are wrapped up in this ending fall flat. And at the end, once the Dominions are reconciled, the Goddesses are free, and God is dead, all I could feel was a bit hollow and happy it was finally over.

I realize this probably makes it sound like I hate the book, and I don't. I just wish that what we had at the end was good enough to justify the journey we took to get there.

It lost me towards the end

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