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Old 11-25-2008, 10:10 PM   #176
octothorp
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Originally Posted by Iowa_Flames_Fan View Post
In the category of Canadian Literature, Bartleby and the Scriveners are pleased to select Michael Ondaatje's The English Patient.



Is it possible for a bestseller to be an underrated book? Published in 1997, this book was more or less responsible for launching Ondaatje, until then known mostly in the Toronto literary scene, into a new realm of international stardom and movie deals. Many people know the film adapation, in its own right a remarkable piece of cinema, even if it doesn't resemble the book very much in a formal sense. But I feel gratified to have encountered this book first, and to see in it the real achievement of Ondaatje's career--a book that achieves solid craftsmanship in Ondaatje's surgically precise linguistic style, along with a riveting, complex plot that unfolds piece by piece like a puzzle. Ondaatje has numerous brilliant works: wrenchingly potent lyric poetry in The Cinnamon Peeler, experimental writing in The Collected Works of Billy the Kid, improvisatory writing in In the Skin of a Lion, the list goes on. But The English Patient is where Ondaatje puts it all together, and it remains his best work to this day.
Thumbs up to both your pick and your team name.
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