Piranesi

These 14 (later 16) plates depict vast, windowless interiors filled with colossal machinery: wooden gantries, swinging rope bridges, hidden pulleys, and spiked torture wheels. The perspective is deliberately broken. Your eye climbs a staircase, only to find it ends in a blank wall two feet above. A bridge spans a chasm, but the chasm is actually an archway leading to another, darker chasm.

The novel’s protagonist—who calls himself —lives in a House that is infinite. The Lower Halls are filled with tidal waves; the Upper Halls contain clouds. Statues of unknown heroes and fauns line every corridor. There are only two other living people in the world: the Other, a man obsessed with a secret knowledge, and the Prophet, a mysterious figure from the 19th century. Piranesi

Susanna Clarke, who had spent 16 years writing her follow-up to the massive hit Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell , published a small, strange, perfect novel titled simply . These 14 (later 16) plates depict vast, windowless

These 14 (later 16) plates depict vast, windowless interiors filled with colossal machinery: wooden gantries, swinging rope bridges, hidden pulleys, and spiked torture wheels. The perspective is deliberately broken. Your eye climbs a staircase, only to find it ends in a blank wall two feet above. A bridge spans a chasm, but the chasm is actually an archway leading to another, darker chasm.

The novel’s protagonist—who calls himself —lives in a House that is infinite. The Lower Halls are filled with tidal waves; the Upper Halls contain clouds. Statues of unknown heroes and fauns line every corridor. There are only two other living people in the world: the Other, a man obsessed with a secret knowledge, and the Prophet, a mysterious figure from the 19th century.

Susanna Clarke, who had spent 16 years writing her follow-up to the massive hit Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell , published a small, strange, perfect novel titled simply .