THE GLASS HOTEL

格拉斯大酒店

類別 : 推理小說
ISBN:978-0525521143
頁數 : 320
出版 : Knopf, 2020 年 3 月 24 日
版本 : 精裝版
版權窗口 : 繁體博達代理Mingming / 简体博達代理Changchih

內容介紹

  • 將被HBO MAX改編成影集!
  • 《紐約時報》(the New York Times)、《娛樂週刊》(Entertainment Weekly)、《新聞週刊》(Newsweek)、《今日美國》(USA Today)、《女人日》(Women’s Day)以及《今日秀》(The Today Show)評為2020年最引頸期盼的好書之一!
  • 加拿大獨立暢銷書排行榜榜首!
  • 紐時排行榜第四,《出版商週刊》暢銷書排行榜第六名!

 

文森(Vincent)原本在溫哥華島最北端一間五星級旅館擔任調酒師。當她遇見喬納森・歐凱帝斯(Jonathan Alkaitis)的當晚,飯店大廳的玻璃上被人畫上一段駭人的文字:「你為何不吞下玻璃算了?」

 

運輸專員里昂·普雷萬特(Leon Prevant)也看見了這些嚇人的文字,他趕緊點杯飲料讓自己冷靜下來。身兼旅館擁有者和富有的投資經理人歐凱帝斯,沒能看見這段留給他的驚悚訊息。歐凱帝斯在當晚給了文森一百美元的小費和他的名片,一年之後,他們成為夫妻並住在一起。

 

鏡頭轉到曼哈頓,巨大的金融犯罪悄悄進行著,歐凱帝斯正在謀劃一場瞞天過海的國際龐氏騙局,透過客戶的帳戶轉移虛假的資金,至此包括擁有一位藝術家的畢生積蓄、沙烏地阿拉伯王子的財產,以及包含里昂在內,無數人攢積一生的退休基金。而騙局終將崩盤,謊言捏造的金錢帝國如災難席捲般迅速瓦解,摧毀了財富和生活。

 

長期假扮歐凱帝斯妻子的文森也遭受牽連,直到數年之後,登上了一艘船,從此消失了……

 

多年後,一位受害人受雇調查文森消失的神秘事件,這場騙局才又被重新提起……

 

作者艾蜜莉.孟德爾(Emily St. John Mandel)帶領讀者走訪不為人知的風景:徹夜不歸的地下電子俱樂部、繁忙的國際航運業務、豪華酒店的頂級服務、聯邦監獄裡不見光的日子。充滿了意想不到的美麗,這片玻璃映照著貪婪、罪惡、愛與錯覺,以及我們在人生中找尋意義的無限方式。

相關影片

作者介紹

生於加拿大,曾於多倫多舞蹈劇團研習現代舞,現居紐約,為文學評論站「the Millions」專職撰稿人。她的前三本小說《蒙特婁的最後一夜》《歌手之槍》《羅拉四重奏》皆由獨立出版社發行,並入選獨立書商推薦選書,《歌手之槍》更在法國奪下推理小說評論獎。最新作品《如果我們的世界消失了》(STATION ELEVEN)讓她成為歐美大出版社極力爭取的作家,在美國、加拿大由知名出版集團藍燈書屋旗下的文學品牌Knopf Doubleday發行,是孟德爾第一本跨出小眾的突破之作。本書不僅闖入美國國家書卷獎決選,勇奪英國重量級亞瑟.克拉克小說獎,更幾乎囊括了2014英、美所有媒體的年度選書榜單。

書評

"A lovely, beautifully written and constructed novel that I couldn’t put down, full of memorable, unusual characters... Mandel’s agility with time in this story was a marvel."—Kristin Hannah, author of The Nightingale

 

"The question of what is real—be it love, money, place or memory—has always been at the heart of Ms. Mandel’s fiction... her narratives snake their way across treacherous, shifting terrain. Certainties are blurred, truth becomes malleable and in The Glass Hotel the con man thrives... Lyrical, hypnotic images... suspend us in a kind of hallucinatory present where every detail is sharply defined yet queasily unreliable. A sense of unease thickens... Ms. Mandel invites us to observe her characters from a distance even as we enter their lives, a feat she achieves with remarkable skill. And if the result is a sense not only of detachment but also of desolation, then maybe that’s the point." —Anna Mundow, Wall Street Journal

 

"A striking book that's every bit as powerful — and timely — as its predecessor… In Vincent and Paul, Mandel has created two of the most memorable characters in recent American fiction… Mandel's writing shines throughout the book, just as it did in Station Eleven. She's not a showy writer, but an unerringly graceful one, and she treats her characters with compassion but not pity. The Glass Hotel is a masterpiece, just as good — if not better — than its predecessor. It's a stunning look at how people react to disasters, both small and large, and the temptation that some have to give up when faced with tragedy." —Michael Shaub, NPR

 

"Though its characters were inspired by Bernie Madoff, his victims, and his enablers, there’s much more to this novel than ripped-from-the-headlines voyeurism; it’s a gorgeously constructed tapestry, each jewellike sentence building to one of the most devastating, moving endings in recent memory. I read it when I was feeling uniquely exhausted by the demands of COVID-era living; I still couldn’t put it down."—Vanity Fair

 

"Mandel’s gift is to weave realism out of extremity. She plants her flag where the ordinary and the astonishing meet, where everyday people pause to wonder how, exactly, it came to this. She is our bard of waking up in the wrong time line... One effect of Mandel’s book is to underscore the seemingly infinite paths a person might travel... There is a suggestion, toward the end of The Glass Hotel, that frequent commerce with the dead (or the imaginary) might reconnect us to the living... Perhaps it is with this in mind that Mandel has constructed a fantasy for our temporary habitation. Her story offers escape, but the kind that depends on and is inseparable from the world beyond it."—Katy Waldman, The New Yorker

 

"[This] novel [is] so absorbing, so fully realized that it draws you out of your own constricted situation and expands your sense of possibilities. For me, over the past 10 days or so, the novel that's performed that act of deliverance... it's "straight" literary fiction, gorgeous and haunting, about the porous boundaries between past and present, the rich and the poor, and the realms of the living and the dead... This all-encompassing awareness of the mutability of life grows more pronounced as The Glass Hotel reaches its eerie sea change of an ending. In dramatizing so ingeniously how precarious and changeable everything is, Mandel's novel is topical in a way she couldn't have foreseen when she was writing it."—Maureen Corrigan, Fresh Air

 

"A wondrously entertaining novel… The Glass Hotel is never dull. Tracing the permutations of its characters’ lives, from depressing apartments in bad neighborhoods to posh Dubai resorts to Manhattan bars, Colorado campgrounds, and the Edinburgh Fringe Festival is like following the intricate patterns on Moroccan tiles. The pleasure, which in the case of The Glass Hotel is abundant, lies in the patterns themselves… This is a type of art that closely approximates life, and a remarkable accomplishment for Mandel… This novel invites you to inhabit it without striving or urging; it’s a place to be, always fiction’s most welcome effect."—Laura Miller, Slate

 

"The Glass Hotel may be the perfect novel for your survival bunker... Freshly mysterious... Mandel is a consummate, almost profligate world builder. One superbly developed setting gives way to the next, as her attention winds from character to character, resting long enough to explore the peculiar mechanics of each life before slipping over to the next... That Mandel manages to cover so much, so deeply is the abiding mystery of this book. The 300 pages of The Glass Hotel work harder than most 600-page novels... The disappointment of leaving one story is immediately quelled by our fascination in the next... The complex, troubled people who inhabit Mandel’s novel are vexed and haunted by their failings, driven to create ever more pleasant reflections of themselves in the glass."—Ron Charles, The Washington Post

 

"An eerie, compelling follow-up... not your grandmother’s Agatha Christie murder mystery or haunted hotel ghost story... The novel’s ongoing sense of haunting extends well beyond its ghosts... The ghosts in  The Glass Hotel are directly connected to its secrets and scandals, which mirror those of our time... Like all Mandel’s novels, The Glass Hotel is flawlessly constructed... The Glass Hotel declares the world to be as bleak as it is beautiful, just like this novel."—Rebecca Steinitz, The Boston Globe

 

"Another gripping tale of interconnected lives."—People

 

"A good pick for anyone struggling to focus right now. You won’t be able to look away."—The Skimm

 

"Another swirling novel that takes readers through some of the darkest moments of people's lives -- but don't let that deceive you into thinking this is one bleak read. It's more like a fantastic reading companion, tonally and thematically similar, to HBO's movie Bad Education... the full picture devastatingly comes together at the end."—Thrillist

 

"A beguiling tale about skewed morals, reckless lives and necessary means of escape… A sprawling, immersive book… The novel’s scope and brimming vitality are… its strengths."—The Economist

 

"Mandel has done again what she does best: wrapping up the stories of a large cast of characters into one cohesive package... The Glass Hotel is a quietly rewarding book. Despite its subject matter, it is as unlike a financial thriller as can be. Instead, it offers a look at the lives left unlived and the siren song of money. Come for the Ponzi scheme, stay for the satisfying conclusion."—The Harvard Crimson

 

"Emily St. John Mandel’s storytelling stretches to see into as many windows as possible. Peer closely: characters move between windows, themes reflect and refract... These are not novels weighted by philosophical debates, however, but stories buoyed by serious concerns; Mandel is as dedicated to plotting as she is to characterization... Characters are linked in unexpected directions, within and between books. It’s a joy to pull at the threads and follow their knots and loops... And despite all the glass, there is more conflict than clarity. This makes for compulsively readable novels, carefully crafted page-turners. Don’t just say you’ll visit someday. Call ahead. Make a reservation. Check out the view from The Glass Hotel. Enjoy your stay.”—Marcie McCauley, Chicago Review of Books

 

"An ephemeral quality permeates the novel… It’s a thrill when the puzzle pieces start to fit together… The final chapter is haunting, taking readers full circle… It’s a sense readers will enjoy as well when they lose themselves in Mandel’s novel."—Rob Merrill, Associated Press

 

"Emily St. John Mandel has a knack for explosive openings… Mandel is constructing a sort of multiverse that demonstrates the power of fiction to imagine simultaneous realities."—Josephine Livingstone, The New Republic

 

"Mandel’s characters are crisply drawn, all sharp lines and living color. Everyone in the book is witty...  Taken together, their overlapping stories are gripping, in part because we spend so much time in their heads we have to know how it all turns out and in part because they are all eventually honest with themselves, with the exception of Alkaitis. They all wish they were good people but don’t think they ever will be. Mandel’s books are soulful and subtly philosophical."—Seth Mandel, Wsahington Examiner

 

"The Glass Hotel moves backward and forward in time, shifting voice and perspective in a way that helps highlight coincidences and broaden one’s perspective. Readers will enjoy piecing together the fragments and clues that Mandel leaves for them.... Mandel shows, in countless ways, just how tenuous our lives can be, how easily illusions evaporate and relationships dissolve. Her writing is perceptive and expressive, constructing a novel that is simultaneously complex and compelling, worthy of either a slow read or a breathless one."—Book Reporter

 

"Mandel’s brilliant new novel, The Glass Hotel, is... artful in its time-skipping, globe-hopping immersion in its characters’ lives... It's a puzzle book... Mandel’s exquisite narratorial juggling is her way of casting light on how we see our lives and attempt to shape them — in retrospect, in anticipation, in our imaginations... Mandel is a marvelous writer... The keenest pleasure of The Glass Hotel is simply in the magic with which it immerses you in the calm, disorienting way that Mandel and her stubborn, enigmatic heroine see the world."—Michael Upchurch, Seattle Times

 

"What Mandel crafts here is the literary equivalent of Paul Thomas Anderson’s Magnolia,... The rough edges of these connections keep them from feeling too pat, instead creating a world where coincidence is real...  What remains haunting about it is the way it transforms familiar environments into expansive worlds. Mandel’s prose is clean and richly detailed, and she seems to know just the right amount of depth to include in each moment... There’s a deep underlying sadness to The Glass Hotel as a whole, a sense of reflecting on how the end of things is always inevitable. But those emotions come with an accompanying gratitude; while nothing lasts, it was at least with us for a time."—Liz Shannon Miller, Paste

 

"Half mist and dreams, this [is a] sophisticated take on the fragility of human connection and the ability to make do with less after the loss of success... Its concern with the sanding of life's jagged edges remains true to readers' expectations of Mandel's incisive vision"—Shelf Awareness

 

"Mandel’s crystal ball and uncanny sense of timing remain intact, with a novel of economic collapse, predatory financial figures and widespread corruption... Simply stunning, a boldly experimental work which hooks the reader from its first pages, wending to a powerfully emotional conclusion... The Glass Hotel is a compulsive read, a commercial crowd-pleaser which will, undoubtedly, find a wide audience. It is also a consummate literary novel, courageous and exciting at a structural level. Books that hit the sweet spot like that are rare to find; we should savour them when we can."—Robert J. Wiersema, The Toronto Star

 

"The novel proceeds via a series of vignettes set at various points between 1958 and 2029 and ranging around the globe. They gradually knit themselves into a single story in a way that will remind readers of Jennifer Egan’s A Visit From the Goon Squad... This is a strange, ethereal, and very well-written book, so interesting it might actually take your mind off things for a while."—Marion Winik, Newsday

 

"There is a complex grace to The Glass Hotel that’s often lacking from contemporary fiction, particularly contemporary thriller fiction. It’s not simply Mandel’s deft prose, her ability to write Dickensian networks of coincidence, but her keen observation of human behavior: our fears, our dreams, what drives us, and what might ultimately destroy or save each of us. From the opening scene of the book, I was hooked... a stunningly good meditation on human frailty, the nature of love, and what it means to survive in the modern world."—Yvonne C. Garrett, The Brooklyn Rail

 

"The dreamiest, most ethereal novel about a Ponzi scheme that you will ever read... a novel that dives deep into the consequences of the seemingly smallest immoral decisions."—Margaret Quamme, The Columbus Dispatch

 

"There are few better feelings than the sensation that comes with the dawning realization that the book you are reading isn’t just good, but great... Emily St. John Mandel’s The Glass Hotel offers up just such greatness... A mesmerizing puzzle box of a book... Masterful, an elegantly constructed work of great emotional power and literary sophistication."—Allen Adams, The Maine Edge

 

"Emily St. John Mandel has an uncanny knack for shape... For all the metaphysical ponderings, The Glass Hotel’s most apparent virtue is its breakneck pacing and compulsive readability. It bodes an elegant and fragmented form, one that excellently matches Mandell’s magnificent storytelling. And what more needs to be said about her storytelling? It is nothing short of an insistent and astonishing gift."—Brady Brickner-Wood, Ploughshares

 

"The Glass Hotel... totally sticks the landing… Mandel’s prose is such a pleasure to read… [I] gave way to real delight in the skill with which Mandel brings together themes that have occupied previous sections of the novel, revisiting earlier characters and incidents from surprising new perspectives in a narrative sleight of hand that recalls what M. Night Shyamalan does in movies such as Unbreakable. Mandel’s conclusion is dazzling."—Chris Hewitt, Minneapolis Star Tribune

 

"Absorbing, finely wrought... Mandel paints an intricately plotted, haunting portrait of heartbreak, abandonment, betrayal, riches, corruption and reinvention in a contemporary world both strange and weirdly recognizable."—Joyce Sáenz Harris, Dallas Morning News

 

"Mandel... specializes in fiction that weaves together seemingly unrelated people, places and things. The Glass Hotel... is no exception... Kaleidoscopic... Mandel dissects the surreal division between those who are conscious of ongoing crimes, and those who are unwittingly brought into them... The Glass Hotel... examine[s]  how we respond to chaos after catastrophe."—Annabel Gutterman, Time

 

"A careful, damning study of the forms of disaster humanity brings down on itself... In a world where rolling disasters fade into one another, it’s a reminder that Mandel wants to lurch us out of the tedium."—Hillary Kelly, Vulture

 

"The Glass Hotel will haunt you… Mandel delicately illuminates the devastation wreaked on the fraud’s victims while brilliantly teasing out the hairsbreadth moments in which a person can seamlessly slide into moral corruption… The Glass Hotel isn’t so much plot driven as it is coiled—a taut braid of lives undone by Alkaitis’ and others’ grifts… negotiating slippery ethics and questionable compromises, and the liminal space between innocence and treachery." —Ivy Pochoda, O Magazine

 

"Deeply imagined, philosophically profound… The Glass Hotel moves forward propulsively, its characters continually on the run… Richly satisfying… The Glass Hotel is ultimately as immersive a reading experience as its predecessor [Station Eleven], finding all the necessary imaginative depth within the more realistic confines of its world… Revolutionary."—Ruth Franklin, The Atlantic

 

"Long-anticipated... At its heart, this is a ghost story in which every boundary is blurred, from the moral to the physical... In luminous prose, Mandel shows how easy it is to become caught in a web of unintended consequences and how disastrous it can be when such fragile bonds shatter under pressure. A strange, subtle, and haunting novel." —Kirkus Reviews, starred

 

"Another tale of wanderers whose fates are interconnected... nail-biting tension... Mandel weaves an intricate spider web of a story... A gorgeously rendered tragedy."—Booklist, starred 

 

"Mandel’s wonderful novel (after Station Eleven) follows a brother and sister as they navigate heartache, loneliness, wealth, corruption, drugs, ghosts, and guilt... This ingenious, enthralling novel probes the tenuous yet unbreakable bonds between people and the lasting effects of momentary carelessness."—Publishers Weekly, starred

得獎紀錄

  • Houston Chronicle, “22 books we’re excited for in 2020” 
  • Writer’s Digest, “WD’s Most Anticipated 2020 Book Releases”
  • Medium,  “My Most Anticipated Books of 2020 (part 1)”
  • Real Simple, “The Best Books of 2020 (So Far)”
  • She Reads “The most anticipated books of 2020”
  • Read it Forward, “Books We Can’t Wait to Read in 2020”
  • BookRiot, “20 of the Best Book Club Books for 2020”
  • The Rumpus, “What to Read When 2020 is Just Around the Corner”
  • Paste Magazine, “25 Most Anticipated Novels of 2020"
  • E News, “Top 20 Books to Read in 2020”
  • The Week, “19 books to read in 2020”
  • Harper’s Bazaar,  “The 15 Best Books to Read in 2020”
  • Five Books, “Editors’ Picks: Notable New Novels of Early 2020”
  • A Washington Independent Review of Books Most Anticipated Book of 2020
  • A Books and Sensibility Most Anticipated Book of 2020

海外授權

Canada/HarperCollins Canada
UK/Picador; Dutch/Atlas
French/Payot/Rivages
Greek/Ikaros
Hungarian/Gabo Kiado
Italian/La Nave di Teseo
Korean/Bookroad
Lithuanian/Baltos Lankos
Macedonian/Pablisher
Polish/Poradnia K
Portuguese/Presença
Russian/Eksmo
Serbian/Carobna Knjiga
Spanish/ Ático de los Libros
Swedish/Trut Publishing

格拉斯大酒店

THE GLASS HOTEL

格拉斯大酒店

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