Reviews

Gutenberg's Apprentice by Alix Christie

slim_oysterhiatus's review

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4.0

Interesting to read other reviews saying this lacked depth because I was captivated by the layers that made early modern Europe come alive--the relationships between the characters and their perception of class and professional trade, the corruption and schisms within the church, the theocratic-political battles, and not to mention the development of the printing press itself.

gotobedmouse's review

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3.0

I finished it, and I have to say I am a better person for reading this book. I started enjoying the book about 75% of the way through it. The first 3/4 of the book was tedious and a little over my head. I had to research 1450's Germany history (which I am not ashamed to say I knew absolutely nothing about before this book). The book seemed to drag on and on about font and the process of making the letters which was the most boring part of the book. However, I am glad I got through it. I learned a lot, and did get out of my comfort zone which is a book clubs job.

amalies's review

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4.0

This was a very informative book of historical fiction told through the point of view of his apprentice, the man who set the type cast, of the hard years Gutenberg spent making the first bible. How people viewed the printing press as suspicion. The lies that were told to keep the work on the bible a secret. The work of the people inside his press, how long it took to finish the bible, how many different techniques they discovered in the process, how they worked themselves with basically no sleep and little food, how they raised money to buy supplies, and on and on. It is the story of men that slaved to complete a magnificent hospital event and the day to day things they endured. I have always appreciated his work as an inventor, but this book really gave me a grasp on the intense amount I have to really be grateful for his work and how it shaped history.

danibee's review

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Ok - this book, in beer terms, is a stout. It is July and 100+ degrees outside, and I would like to read something that is a fruity sour. Nothing wrong with the book, just not the right season for me. 

onceuponasarah's review

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2.0

I liked this, it was very interesting, and I liked the historical aspects. That being said, I could never really get over the flowery writing style, where almost every sentence had a bunch of adjectives. I personally don't care for that type of writing style. It was also just a little bit boring, I felt the story was building to something but that something never came. Otherwise, I would recommend it if you like the subject a lot.

mbondlamberty's review

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3.0

This was an informative read. It would have been nice if somewhere mention had been made of the fact that printed text had existed for centuries in Asia, but not necessarily the purview of the author.
The characters weren't very likeable but I liked the focus on the skills and the time. One can see the precursors to the Reformation everywhere.

sarahjhin's review

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3.0

Well-written but kinda boring.

salve58's review

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3.0

Great story that could have been much more. The writing was a bit clunky for me and I often didn't quite know what was going on. The characters were shallow and boring and it probably should have been written in the first person.

asegurasmith's review

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2.0

Interesting subject. If it had been a 100 pages shorter it would have been better.

fictionfan's review

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3.0

In the beginning was the Word...

Peter Schoeffer has devoted his youth to learning the art of scribing but, just as he is on the point of success in his career, his adoptive father calls him back to Mainz to apprentice him all over again – this time to Johannes Gutenberg. Peter is horrified to discover that Gutenberg has created a way to print books, this seeming almost blasphemous to a young man trained to believe that every word he writes is for the glory of God. However, when it is decided that they will print a Bible, Peter comes to believe that the printing will make the word of God more accessible than it has ever been and that he has been chosen by God to perform this task. However, the printing will take years and must be done in secrecy, and Gutenberg is a difficult master to work for. As time passes, resentments grow and Peter feels the secret may be betrayed before the book can be completed...

This is a book that I really wish I could praise more. The writing is always good, often excellent. The story is an interesting one, and Christie has clearly done a ton of research, both on printing techniques and on the history of the period. She shows the power of the Roman Church and of the corruption that was commonplace in it. The story is set within the merchant class, and we see how the Trades Guilds operated, often clashing with a Church that made excessive demands on their income with the ever-present threat of excommunication for defaulters. The characterisation of Peter is strong – we see him grow and develop as he moves into manhood and takes on more of the burden of producing the Bible.

However, there are also many flaws in the book – some small, some rather more important. I am the first to complain when an author does an information dump of the research they've done, but this book has the opposite problem. Christie has clearly steeped herself so deeply in the time and place that she seems to forget that the reader may not be as familiar with the political and religious circumstances as she. Many times I felt that she under-explained things, leaving me without a clear grasp of the bigger picture. So while I got that they had to keep the printing hidden, I was never completely clear why. The suggestion seemed to be that the Church would find it blasphemous and shut the printing down, but at the same time the Church was willing to use Gutenberg's technique to print other religious work – I felt this contradiction was left unclarified. I got that the merchants and some of the churchmen were at loggerheads over what was or wasn't due to the Church, but remained vague about the personalities within the Church itself – some were classed as good guys and some bad, but I had no idea why, or indeed who, most of the time.

Rather than just tell the tale, Christie has used a device of us learning about it as Peter recounts the events many years later to an abbot who is writing the history of the Gutenberg Bible. This wouldn't be a problem except that sometimes in these little sections, we learn about things that haven't yet happened in the main section – most odd! In one case, we find out about the early death of a character and then we're taken straight back to the past where she's just about to marry. For me, this kind of thing destroyed any kind of emotional tension or investment.

I've said that the characterisation of Peter is strong, and it is. However he becomes increasingly unlikeable as the book progresses – sanctimonious and self-righteous to a degree that made me want him to fail. (Actually it made me want to hit him over the head with a brick, to be honest.) The other characters are largely underdeveloped, including Peter's family and the woman that he falls in love with. Gutenberg in particular is so patchily portrayed that I was entirely unclear as to what precisely he had done to make Peter resent him so badly. And the men in the workshop never came to life.

In the end, I'm not sure whether I feel the experience of reading this was worth it or not. I did find it well written in terms of the prose, and it held my attention for the most part, but I find I'm unconvinced of the authenticity or completeness of the picture that it gives of either the characters or the time. A pity, because the basic story has all the ingredients to make a fascinating one.

NB This book was provided for review by the publisher, Headline.

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