The Gargoyle

Andrew Davidson
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The Gargoyle

Andrew Davidson
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Overview

CANADIAN496 PAGESENGLISH

Promotional Details

Overall rating: 4.827586 / 5 from 29 reviews.

AI Generated Review Summary

The Gargoyle is a hauntingly beautiful tragic love story that has captivated many readers, making it a favorite among those who have read it. The novel intricately weaves a tale of love that transcends time, set against the backdrop of a medieval hospital ward and a modern burn ward.

Summary topics

  • Love Story: 30%
  • Customer Satisfaction: 67%

Review topics: [book, story, read, romance, man, narrative, novel, audiobook, good, surprise, show, ending, points].

Review highlights

  • "The best part is, it is a beautiful story overall that contains smaller, beautiful short stories within it."Diana
  • "I loved the various stories that she told the narrator (we never do learn his name???)"Sharpquilter
  • "This book was beautifully written and always makes me cry whenever I read it."Hels

Reviews

Don’t know how it got me

"My absolute favourite book. I don’t do cutesy romances and I don’t like time periods, but this one just hits me in all the feels."

Rae S. (5/5)

Dark and powerful.

"This book is absolutely extraordinary 👏. I don't know how I missed it so many years ago. It was such a beautiful surprise, that I wish I can experience for the first time again. This novel is a brilliant and mesmerizing story of a man's descent into his personal hell and the quest for salvation that follows. Judging the cover, I was a bit taken back by how the story begins. As I was reading, I was being very harsh and thought It would be a DNF. Be warned, it is a bit much in some part if you're squeamish to gore. But it's all very well researched, and realistic for what happens to a person who goes through that kind of traumatic experience. It took a bit, but when Marianne Engel comes into the story It was a real turning point for me. I love everything about this book, but especially the Medieval setting. I was crying, and laughing, and cringing. This novel had me going through every emotion and feeling I can think of. This novel is about a love that survives the fires of hell and transcends the boundaries of time, and it does an absolutely amazing job at telling that story. Please, if you haven't already picked this book up. . . Grab it. I've heard the audio book is amazing, and I don't doubt that it is. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ 5/5"

Ellen F. (5/5)

a beautiful romance and parable

"One of the best books I have read in 2022. It was recommended in BBC's show 'Between the Covers' and the participants could not stop talking about it. This had me intrigued so I thought of giving it a chance. First of all, I'd like to congratulate the author for writing such a tremendous book. It is indeed romance but so different from what you read or expect from a romance novel. At some point, I may call it spiritual too. The story starts with a man driving late Friday night on a cliff, bourbon in his lap, and suddenly his car loses its track. The car falls off the cliff, along with the man and in the end, blows up. The man miraculously survives but gets so burned that he is beyond repair. He opens his eyes to a hospital bed in the burn ward, and from here, the story begins. The narrator (in his past life) used to be a pornographer and had angelic looks and the body of a Greek god. Now, all roasted and flayed, from his head to the end of his toes, everything is either damaged or burned. His entire skin is parched beyond repair. His hair is gone, no penis to call him a man, vocal cords are damaged, ears and hearing power singed—in short, he is an overcooked and burned vegetable. Can anyone find any hope in his situation? In his lonely days, despair takes control of him as he relies on morphine, but the snake that has settled into his spine, who whispers suicidal thoughts in him, never shuts up. The narrator goes surgeries after surgery, but his despair is the only constant thing in his life. Until he meets Marriane Engel. Marriane Engel visits the man in the burn ward from a psychiatric ward in the same hospital. Despite strict regulations, she manages to sneak into his room and starts telling him stories, a kind of spin-off of Sheherzaad in Arabian Nights, to keep his mind focused. After a few days, the man starts to enjoy Marriane's company and looks forward to seeing her every day. She brings him books and novelties from past centuries and tells him they have had connections since the fourteenth century. Knowing she has some mental issues, the man still listens to her absurd stories of how she was once a nun in the monastery of Engelthal and worked in their scriptorium to write and translate books. The man (in her imagination) was a mercenary who was brought by his friend after his severe injury. An arrow had hit him, but luckily the man had survived as the arrow was pierced through the book he was carrying: Dante's Inferno. Marriane shows him the book that she has kept for the past eight hundred years, but she has also translated it for him many centuries ago. In their past life, Marrianne had treated his wounds, and in this process, they both fell in love. She had left the monastery and had started a martial life with the man until his past had come forward that he was a wanted criminal. The man (in the present life) keeps on listening to her stories until a year has passed, and he is supposed to discharge from the hospital. Marriane Engel convinces the doctors that she will take care of him and of all the finances. She tells the man that since she has been working for eight hundred years, money is of no issue. The man is taken aback when he agrees to go with her, that Marriane Engel actually lives in a fortress. She is a sculptor by profession and makes quite a good amount of money by selling gargoyles. At this point, readers are still clueless, like the narrator, if Marriane Engel was telling the truth. But how was it possible that she had lived from 1315 up till now and had carried his love for so many centuries? In my opinion, Gargoyle is a kind of parable that teaches us life's lessons, how one can find love, even in Hell or in the worst of times. How love can pull you out of misery when you're on the brink of ending your own life. How one can find your beauty when you are at most of your ugly self. Now I know why the show was praising the book so high. **FIVE stars!"

Samreen (5/5)

Loved This Journey

"This book is absolutely extraordinary. I don't know how I missed it so many years ago. It was such a beautiful surprise, that I wish I can experience for the first time again. This novel is a brilliant and mesmerizing story of a man's descent into his personal hell and the quest for salvation that follows. Judging the cover, I was a bit taken back by how the story begins. As I was reading, I was being very harsh and thought It would be a DNF. Be warned, it is a bit much in some part if you're squeamish to gore. But it's all very well researched, and realistic for what happens to a person who goes through that kind of traumatic experience. It took a bit, but when Marianne Engel comes into the story It was a real turning point for me. I love everything about this book, but especially the Medieval setting. I was crying, and laughing, and cringing. This novel had me going through every emotion and feeling I can think of. This novel is about a love that survives the fires of hell and transcends the boundaries of time, and it does an absolutely amazing job at telling that story. Please, if you haven't already picked this book up. . . Grab it. I've heard the audio book is amazing, and I don't doubt that it is. This book deserves all the hype it received, and any that it still gets! ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ 5/5"

Ellen F. (5/5)

What a journey

"I can read this book over and over again and it leaves me crying. It leads you through such a beautiful journey about love. I always recommend it to friends to read, because it is such a deeply moving and powerful story."

Hels (5/5)

One of my Top Faves of All Time

"This book made me cry actual tears. Extremely captivating and moving. The best part is, it is a beautiful story overall that contains smaller, beautiful short stories within it. I finished this book in 3 days. Unputdownable. 5/5"

Diana (5/5)

Beautiful and captivating

"This is my favourite book. In the end it teaches us all a lesson that many learn the hard way. It's about a man who needs to lose everything in order to discover what really matters in life - love. #plumreview"

Flor (5/5)

Beautiful & haunting

"This was completely not what I expected. It was more. It's a hauntingly beautiful tragic love story and one that I need to read again soon (I read it years ago and still love it)."

Jennifer (5/5)

Recommended to me by a friend

"Sweet and sad, a page turner to the end. I think I'll reread it this summer."

Jennifer (5/5)

My favourite book ever!

"I loved this book, It is my favourite book even years later. Andrew Davidson spins this story that is romantic, heartfelt, beautiful and in some cases hard to read. I recommend this book to all my friends"

JessieKC (5/5)

Q&A

  • Published date: Jun 23, 2009
  • Language: English
  • No. of Pages: 496
  • Publisher: Random House of Canada
  • ISBN: 9780307356789
  • Dimensions: 5.46" W x 1.32" L x 8.22" H
A Globe and Mail and New York Times Bestseller
A New York Times Notable Book
An Amazon.ca Best Book


“An epic page-turner. Davidson’s writing is so vivid and graphic, it will give you the chills.”
People

“There is an admirable clarity to his prose, a careful avoidance of the kind of turgid or melodramatic sentences one finds in lesser writers. . . . The Gargoyle does not disappoint. . . . Sweeping, intergenerational, wholly implausible, unapologetically melodramatic, and absolutely absorbing. . . . Impossible to put down."
The Globe and Mail

“Following close behind David Wroblewski's The Story of Edgar Sawtelle and Brunonia Barry's The Lace Reader, The Gargoyle is another in this summer's extraordinary series of million-dollar debuts from unknown writers that combine elements of mystery and mysticism. . . . I dare you to read this without flinching. It's as engrossing as it is gruesome, the kind of horror you watch with one eye closed.”
The Washington Post

"Seductive. . . . The free-range erudition of books like Possession and The Name of the Rose come to mind. Mr. Davidson binds them together with vigorous and impressive narrative skill."
The New York Times

"An extraordinary first novel. . . . The work of a talented and imaginative new writer."
Daily Telegraph

"Captivating and romantic, The Gargoyle melds modern cynicism and swashbuckling history."
The Denver Post

“You want to be lost in its pages, immersed in the unfolding tale of the human gargoyle and a flesh and blood wraith. In the final analysis, the real tragedy of this book is that it ends.”
New York Daily News

"Utterly refreshing: Davidson set out to write an entertaining and unforgettable novel, undeterred by the withering biases of prize juries in this country, a novel that people—a lot of people—will want to read."
—Edmonton Journal

“Mr. Davidson paints an engaging if not scintillating tableau.”
The Wall Street Journal

“It's wildly romantic, a la Diana Gabaldon, but anchored by a 21st-century sensibility that owes more to Chuck Palahniuk.”
Winnipeg Free Press

“In the first 4 1/2 pages of The Gargoyle, it's clear that Davidson can spin an electrifying yarn.”
The Vancouver Sun

“A wild page-turner and a boldly impudent work that flirts with the trappings of gothic romances, historical novels and fantasies while skirting their clichés and remaining defiantly unique.”
Edmonton Sun

"Undeniably a hot book, one likely to ignite the passion of anyone who loves a mix of romance and the macabre. . . . A spectacularly imaginative journey."
The Washington Post Book World

“Davidson’s debut is storytelling at its finest, featuring a lively assortment of characters and events that combine in a gripping drama that will keep readers’ attention through the very last page. An essential summer book; highly recommended.”
Library Journal

"A truly wonderful read that reveals an extensive imagination and somehow manages to read like a modern, flowing sonnet, but remains accessible."
The Independent Weekly

“[A] deliriously ambitious debut novel.”
Kirkus (starred review)

"I was blown away by Andrew Davidson's The Gargoyle. . . . A hypnotic, horrifying, astonishing novel that manages, against all odds, to be redemptive."
—Sara Gruen, author of Water for Elephants

“After 44 years of reading anything I could get my hands on, including Moby Dick, reading Andrew Davidson’s debut novel made me feel as if I were done. The Gargoyle had it all—all I’d ever wanted or needed from a book. . . . [The] characters are rich and knowing, the imagery breathtaking, the voice and rhythm unfailing.”
The Raabe Review
ANDREW DAVIDSON grew up in Pinawa, Manitoba, and graduated in 1995 from the University of British Columbia with a B.A. in English literature. He has worked as a teacher of English in Japan, where he has lived on and off since the late 1990s, and as a writer of English lessons for Japanese websites. The Gargoyle, the product of seven years’ worth of research and composition, is his first novel.

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