Piranesi book cover

Piranesi

Berryville, Bloomsbury Publishing
ISBN: 9781635575637
Review Editor admin

Susanna Clarke’s Piranesi is one of the strangest and most original novels of recent years. At 245 pages, it is short; it is also almost impossible to describe without robbing it of its central pleasures. What can be said is this: the novel takes place in an enormous House, the narrator keeps meticulous journals about his life there, and gradually – through the accumulated details of those journals – something else comes into focus. To say more is to damage the experience. Piranesi rewards readers who approach it without foreknowledge and trust the strangeness.

What Kind of Novel This Is

The narrator calls himself Piranesi, though the name was given to him by someone else and he is not sure it is really his. He lives in the House, which is infinite – or appears to be – its halls lined with statues and periodically flooded by tides that rise from the lower levels and recede. He eats fish and foliage. He knows only fifteen people in all of existence, most of them dead. He knows one other living person, whom he calls the Other.

Piranesi keeps journals, and the novel is structured as excerpts from those journals. The journals have a date system based on events in the House (the Year the Albatross Came to the South-Western Halls; the Year I Discovered Twelve Dead People in the Fourteenth Vestibule). This system is one of the novel’s many precise details that feel wrong in ways that accumulate slowly into comprehension.

The House operates by its own logic, and Piranesi is a careful observer of that logic. He maps it, catalogs its statues, tracks the tidal patterns, records bird behavior. He is a scientist of his own world, methodical and thorough, and his methodology is both a source of comfort and one of the novel’s central mysteries.

Piranesi as Character

The narrator is one of the most unusual characters in recent fiction. He is gentle, curious, and deeply at home in a world that should be frightening. His relationship to the House is the relationship of someone who has made a place entirely his own through attention and care. He knows every statue in every hall he has mapped. He grieves when a bird dies. He maintains the bones of the dead with ceremony and love.

As the novel progresses and Piranesi begins to understand more about his situation, Clarke tracks the emotional consequences of that understanding with great care. The revelations are not triumphant; they are complicated and sad in ways that make the novel more rather than less moving the more Piranesi comes to know.

Clarke’s Achievement

Clarke published her first novel, Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell, in 2004 to enormous acclaim. She then spent sixteen years not publishing another novel, partly due to illness. Piranesi arrived in 2020 as proof that the long wait had not been wasted. It is a completely different kind of book from Jonathan Strange – shorter, stranger, more intimate – and it demonstrates that Clarke has more than one mode.

The novel draws on a tradition of British fantasy that includes writers like Ursula K. Le Guin and the Inklings, but it does not feel derivative of any of them. Its closest relative might be the fiction of Borges, in its use of an impossible architectural space as a vehicle for philosophical and emotional argument, but the emotional register is warmer than Borges typically permits himself.

What the House Means

The House is many things. It is a mystery to be solved. It is a prison. It is a mind. It is a world complete in itself. Clarke does not restrict it to one meaning, and the novel benefits from this openness. Readers will find different things in the House depending on what they bring to it.

Who This Book Is For

Readers who want fiction that genuinely surprises – that does something they have not encountered before – will find Piranesi extraordinary. It is not a difficult book in the sense of being hard to understand; it is a strange book in the sense of operating according to its own rules. The strangeness is not obstruction; it is the experience.

Frequently Asked Questions

Should I read Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell before Piranesi?
No. The two novels are set in entirely separate fictional worlds with no shared characters or history. Piranesi is a completely independent work.
Is Piranesi fantasy or science fiction?
It is most accurately described as fantasy, though it resists genre categorization. The House operates on rules that are not explained through scientific means. The experience of reading it is closer to fairy tale or myth than to either conventional fantasy or science fiction.
Does Piranesi have a happy ending?
It has an emotionally honest ending that contains both loss and something that functions like peace. Whether that constitutes happiness is a question the reader must answer individually.
Who is Piranesi (the historical figure)?
Giovanni Battista Piranesi (1720-1778) was an Italian printmaker famous for his etchings of Roman ruins and for a series called Carceri d’Invenzione (Imaginary Prisons) – vast, elaborate, architecturally impossible spaces. The connection to Clarke’s novel’s setting is deliberate.
Is Piranesi a fast read?
Most readers finish it in a single sitting or over two evenings. The journal format and short chapters create momentum. The novel is short but dense with implication.
Can I read Piranesi with young readers?
It is appropriate for mature young adult readers (fourteen and above) who can sit with mystery and tolerate uncertainty.
What is the significance of the statues?
The statues that line every hall of the House are one of the novel’s most beautiful details. Piranesi has cataloged and loves each one. Their variety and number are part of the argument about what the House is and how it came to be. Saying more would damage the discovery.
Is the novel religious?
It has a spiritual dimension without being explicitly religious. Piranesi’s relationship to the House has qualities of devotion and gratitude. The novel takes seriously the possibility that some experiences exceed rational explanation without requiring any particular theological framework.

Book Details

Title
Piranesi
Publisher
Berryville, Bloomsbury Publishing
ISBN
9781635575637
WritersReview Rating
5.0 / 5