In which I gush about The Devil and the Dark Water

Ойын-сауық

A review of The Devil and the Dark Water by Stuart Turton. An outstanding genre blend of detective fiction, historical fiction, fantasy, folklore, and even romance. This is a perfect novel.
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Пікірлер: 32

  • @jf8559
    @jf85593 жыл бұрын

    I trust your recommendations so implicitly that I ordered this immediately. I cannot wait! ❤️❤️ Thanks, Will.

  • @WillowTalksBooks

    @WillowTalksBooks

    3 жыл бұрын

    That makes my heart soar! Enjoy!

  • @claudias5564
    @claudias5564 Жыл бұрын

    I just finished the the devil and the dark water, and had to see what others were saying. Your comments are spot on! And that ending… I don’t read that many mysteries, but I’ve 2 of Stuart Turton’s mysteries. I love how everything gets tied up at the end.

  • @shubiektywnie
    @shubiektywnie Жыл бұрын

    Even though I was immensely disappointed with “The seven deaths…”, I knew I had to watch this video as soon as I got this Friends reference in the title (if I’m not mistaken) 😂

  • @ThePixelgrapher
    @ThePixelgrapher2 жыл бұрын

    I'm a good bit into this book and dropped everything else to keep going, eyes glued to each page

  • @WillowTalksBooks

    @WillowTalksBooks

    2 жыл бұрын

    I love to hear that 💜

  • @CathrynDianne
    @CathrynDianne3 жыл бұрын

    Just finished it yesterday! His first book was my favourite book I read last year; I definitely recommend it! I look forward to reading whatever he writes next.

  • @WillowTalksBooks

    @WillowTalksBooks

    3 жыл бұрын

    Awesome news! I have it ready to go and I am itching to get to it.

  • @ameliareads589
    @ameliareads5893 жыл бұрын

    Not a huge fan of historical fiction, not a fan of fantasy at all, not a crime reader, but you really made me considering picking this up! Your enjoyment and excitement is infectious (is that a good word to use right now? 😳). Love listening to you talking about books!

  • @WillowTalksBooks

    @WillowTalksBooks

    3 жыл бұрын

    You are absolutely wonderful. I would honestly consider picking up this book no matter what genres you're into.

  • @crk.resrhetorica
    @crk.resrhetorica2 ай бұрын

    Okay, I'll do as you say. You are very convincing. Question: Is it still in your top ten this three years later?

  • @melanieandbookstacks
    @melanieandbookstacks3 жыл бұрын

    Well I’ll be off to my local bookshop in the morning then...

  • @therealignotus7549
    @therealignotus75492 жыл бұрын

    The Five Orange (Pips) is a famous Holmes shortstory, wonder if perhaps Turton got insparation from there

  • @richard127gm
    @richard127gm2 жыл бұрын

    Having recently read this, I can honestly say that for such a lengthy novel, there isn't a single page that doesn't have something interesting happening. no filler, no dull back story (there is back story, but it's short and relevant). I also thought that there were no surprise endings any more; that they'd all been done. Clearly not so. Brilliant and has jumped into my top ten (possibly top five) of favourite books.

  • @WillowTalksBooks

    @WillowTalksBooks

    2 жыл бұрын

    I agree with everything you said.

  • @frogyvox
    @frogyvox3 жыл бұрын

    Want to watch this...but, are there spoilers?

  • @WillowTalksBooks

    @WillowTalksBooks

    3 жыл бұрын

    No, nothing more than your average blurb gives away.

  • @moumitareads3738
    @moumitareads37382 жыл бұрын

    I loved this book..it was stunning

  • @WillowTalksBooks

    @WillowTalksBooks

    2 жыл бұрын

    It's a proper good'un innit!

  • @moumitareads3738

    @moumitareads3738

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@WillowTalksBooks I really liked the way he planned everything....and not drop something randomly.

  • @RickMacDonnell
    @RickMacDonnell3 жыл бұрын

    I order this book 71 seconds in

  • @toasted_heretic
    @toasted_heretic2 жыл бұрын

    First of all, smashing video (again) thank you. I have just finished reading this and yes I enjoyed it. BUT... I was a little disappointed. Because I had already read The Seven Deaths Of... a book I thought was astonishing. I found The Devil... to be annoyingly over-descriptive but that sounds like it's just me, and I guessed the ending. Don't get me wrong, The Devil is still a super good read, matbe I expected too much after The Seven Deaths? PS: Mr Turton likes a long title doesn't he?

  • @andytiu7351
    @andytiu73513 жыл бұрын

    Boom, just gave you 1k. You're welcome

  • @WillowTalksBooks

    @WillowTalksBooks

    3 жыл бұрын

    LOL cheers!

  • @newyardleysinclair9960
    @newyardleysinclair99602 жыл бұрын

    This book was one of the worst I've ever read. Clearly Turton was a one hit wonder, with his 7 1/2 Deaths success (which was a very good book, but mainly because of it's novelty). There are SO many horribly bad things about this book. I wish I could list them all... -- The unbearable Sherlockinsh psychic cliches ("I see there's yellow on your shoe... clearly you had a sandwich, which means you [insert a bunch of other random deductions] and therefore you must be a professional boxer." "What? wow! how did you know that!") -- Apparently the totally protestant and Calvinist United Provinces who outlawed and banished all Catholicism is now filled with.... Catholics? With Rosaries? And who say "Mass"? And have the sacrament of Confession...? All things that would have caused a person in the United Provinces to be severely punished, banished, or burned at the stake. This is just insultingly lazy on the part of the author. He literally could have read ONE single paragraph from any article or encyclopedia entry on religion in this era and culture and avoided this. It's such a drastically erroneous oversight that it hugely impacts the believability of the fictional world the author is trying to immerse us in. This isn't one of those "slight details" that only anal people care about. This is the equivalent of a fiction novel taking place in 1950s Soviet Moscow, and all the inhabitants of the Kremlin are Libertarian Capitalists and attend Muslim Mosques on their lunch breaks. The whole "it's not a religious or historical novel" excuse simply doesn't work here. -- The Cliche and absolutely absurd Scooby-Doo style ending is simply insulting to the reader's intelligence. The masks are ripped off and main characters were literally and randomly the opposite of themselves the entire time. Wow... how convenient and "shocking". Yeah... shocking... that's the word the Sheep will use when they praise the "twists" at the end. --The revelation at the end that this entire multi-week elaborate and incredibly complex impossible charade made up of systems of systems and relying on hundreds of perfect tiny little variables, all of which would fail if one tiny thing had not gone to plan was all undertaken just so that the culprits could deal with a person "a certain way that would make them remember something" is just plain dumb and, again, insulting to the reader. --The fact that the evil geniuses who put hundreds of lives (including innocent women and children) at risk and caused a lot of deaths are suddenly flipped into being the good guys and the protagonists who lived through it all suddenly forgive them and smirk about their absurd plans for more adventures in the future... just painfully dumb. -- The book is riddled with inconsistencies and contradictions from one chapter to the next: The guy with one eye suddenly has two eyes at one point... the guy with one hand has two at one point... a couple of the 7 ships sail ahead without permission before nightfall while theirs is anchored, but hours later at night the author forgets this and they're now talking about all 7 lanterns being visible plus an 8th... a retelling of an incident in europe in which a man was almost wrongfully executed but saved because Sammy rode up on a horse with the evidence in hand just in time, in front of the man about to be executed... is later retold but this time Sammy did NOT arrive in time and the wrongfully accused had to flee... there were so, so many little mistakes and contradictions like this... I should have written them all down) --The main "hidden clue" that the entire plot and mystery hinges on is kept on something in plain sight but the characters are artificially made to ignore it or dismiss it. --The old cliche of "the novel takes place in an old era, but all the main characters are internally "woke" young people from the 2020s and think and believe all the things people from 2020 believe, morally, socially, politically, philosophically, even scientifically and medically". This happens a lot in low quality writing and it's absolutely insulting and amateurish. --Piggy-backing on the last point, the "unenlightenedness" of the era is vastly over-exaggerated and painfully inaccurate. Snobbish "enlightened" people have a tendency to fabricate overkill fantasies about gullible people believing in God or the Devil therefore descending into a frenzy in which entire towns kill each other due to superstitions, when in fact these things were almost unheard of. Apparently if a woman displays brilliance, or good ideas she's hated and beaten and potentially put to death. Yeah... that's definitely the norm. Stupid evil patriarchal males. Sorry but it's all just too cliche. --Lot's of magical "potions" that can cure and do amazing things, cuz "science" and alchemy. --Characters are painfully dull and 2-dimensional. --The tendency to far over-exaggerate the evil of the main antagonist in stupidly cartoonish ways is always a sign of an amateur who has no idea how to make real characters. --A very strange bizarre instance in which the book which had been moving at about a chapter per "in-story" hour was suddenly put into fast forward for an entire two-week period of "running from a storm" in which apparently nothing happened and the characters didn't get anywhere in unravelling the mystery... in two weeks. And suddenly we just pick up where we left off. Just bizarre. -- Grammatical errors. Not a huge deal, but it adds to the pile. -- The pure stupidity of some of the methods revealed at the end that were used to fake the spiritual experiences (yeah... they drilled holes that nobody noticed... that's how they all heard voices in their heads..." c'mon! It's not just thin, it's actually offensively insulting to the reader. There was so much more wrong with this novel. So, so much. I should have kept a log while reading through it all. There are at least a dozen other bullet points I could list here but I've forgotten them. I understand that a lot of the positive reviewers were fanboys of his first book, 7 1/2 Deaths (which also had an idiotic scooby doo style ending) and they feel emotionally bound to write praises for this one because of the "shocking twists" but please, think carefully before doing so. An 8 year old could have come up with these kinds of twists. A book needs to be more than that. And above all a book needs to respect the reader, not insult their intelligence. Fiction suffers overall when readers give authors a free pass because of "the halo effect" they earned from a previous (and admittedly good) novel. We need to hold authors to a higher standard. This kind of writing lowers that standard, not to mention threatens to lower the collective IQ of fiction readers in general if we all lie to ourselves and heap praises where it's undeserved

  • @WillowTalksBooks

    @WillowTalksBooks

    2 жыл бұрын

    I'm not reading all of that. Reading is for nerds.

  • @Ccccccccccsssssssssss

    @Ccccccccccsssssssssss

    Жыл бұрын

    Word thanks for spelling it all out, this book was TERRIBLE! My only hope is that the folks giving it good reviews were paid to do so.

  • @newyardleysinclair9960

    @newyardleysinclair9960

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@WillowTalksBookslol cause it went against your lousy paid for review

  • @newyardleysinclair9960

    @newyardleysinclair9960

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@Ccccccccccsssssssssssthey were. This guy was paid. The book was terrible

  • @Ccccccccccsssssssssss
    @Ccccccccccsssssssssss Жыл бұрын

    This book was utter garbage

  • @WillowTalksBooks

    @WillowTalksBooks

    Жыл бұрын

    So eloquent 🥹

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