Take a Sneak Peek at Susanna Clarke’s Highly Anticipated New Novel, Piranesi

Take a Sneak Peek at Susanna Clarke’s Highly Anticipated New Novel, Piranesi

When the Moon rose in the Third Northern Hall I went to the Ninth Vestibule

Entry for the first day of the fifth month in the year the Albatross came to the South-Western Halls

When the Moon rose in the Third Northern Hall I went to the Ninth Vestibule to witness the joining of three Tides. This is something that happens only once every eight years.

The Ninth Vestibule is remarkable for the three great Staircases it contains. Its Walls are lined with marble Statues, hundreds upon hundreds of them, Tier upon Tier, rising into the distant heights.

I climbed up the Western Wall until I reached the Statue of a Woman carrying a Beehive, fifteen metres above the Pavement. The Woman is two or three times my own height and the Beehive is covered with marble Bees the size of my thumb. One Bee – this always gives me a slight sensation of queasiness – crawls over her left Eye. I squeezed myself into the Woman’s Niche and waited until I heard the Tides roaring in the Lower Halls and felt the Walls vibrating with the force of what was about to happen.

First came the Tide from the Far Eastern Halls. This Tide ascended the easternmost Staircase without violence. It had no colour to speak of and its Waters were no more than ankle deep. It spread a grey mirror across the Pavement, the surface of which was marbled with streaks of milky Foam.

Next came the Tide from the Western Halls.This Tide thundered up the westernmost Staircase and hit the Eastern Wall with a great Clap, making all the Statues tremble. Its Foam was the white of old fishbones, and its churning depths were pewter. Within seconds its Waters were as high as the Waists of the First Tier of Statues.

Last came the Tide from the Northern Halls. It hurled itself up the middle Staircase, filling the Vestibule with an explosion of glittering, ice-white Foam. I was drenched and blinded. When I could see again Waters were cascading down the Statues. It was then that I realised I had made a mistake in calculating the volumes of the Second and Third Tides. A towering Peak of Water swept up to where I crouched. A great Hand of Water reached out to pluck me from the Wall. I flung my arms around the Legs of the Woman carrying a Beehive and prayed to the House to protect me. The Waters covered me and for a moment I was surrounded by the strange silence that comes when the Sea sweeps over you and drowns its own sounds. I thought that I was going to die; or else that I would be swept away to Unknown Halls, far from the rush and thrum of Familiar Tides. I clung on.

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Reviews

Susanna Clarke Shares the Inspiration Behind her Enchanting New Novel, Piranesi

Review | Author Related

21 September 2020

Susanna Clarke Shares the Inspiration Behind her Enchanting New Novel, Piranesi

    Spectacular and Spellbinding: Read our Review of Piranesi by Susanna Clarke

    Review | Our Review

    21 September 2020

    Spectacular and Spellbinding: Read our Review of Piranesi by Susanna Clarke

      Publisher details

      Piranesi
      Author
      Susanna Clarke
      Publisher
      Bloomsbury
      Genre
      Fiction
      Released
      15 September, 2020
      ISBN
      9781526622426

      Synopsis

      The long-awaited return from the author of the multi-million copy bestselling Jonathan Strange & Mr NorrellPiranesi lives in the House. Perhaps he always has?Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell transported over four million readers into its mysterious world. It became an instant classic and has been hailed as one of the finest works of fiction of the twenty-first century.Fifteen years later, it is finally time to enter the House and meet Piranesi.May your Paths be safe, your Floors unbroken and may the House fill your eyes with Beauty.
      Susanna Clarke
      About the author

      Susanna Clarke

      Susanna Clarke was born in Nottingham, England, in 1959, the eldest daughter of a Methodist minister. She was educated at St Hilda's College, Oxford, and has worked in various areas of nonfiction publishing. She has published a number of short stories and novellas in American anthologies, as well as her own most recent collection of short stories entitled The Ladies of Grace Adieu, and Other Stories.

      Books by Susanna Clarke

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