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David Flusfeder

Author of The Gift

10+ Works 229 Members 2 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the name: D.L. Flusfeder

Works by David Flusfeder

The Gift (2003) 79 copies
John the Pupil: A Novel (2014) 71 copies, 2 reviews
The Pagan House (2007) 20 copies
Morocco (2000) 18 copies
A Film by Spencer Ludwig (2010) 15 copies
Man Kills Woman (1993) 15 copies
Like Plastic (1996) 5 copies
Luck (2022) 4 copies
Le Cadeau (2004) 1 copy

Associated Works

Granta 143: After the Fact (2018) — Contributor — 45 copies, 1 review
The Seven Deadly Sins: A Celebration of Virtue and Vice (2012) — Contributor — 11 copies
Hebbes 8 : 12 nieuwe smaakmakers voor het voorjaar 2003 — Contributor — 5 copies, 1 review

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1960
Gender
male

Members

Reviews

Didn't find this amazing. I read as an ebook which was not formatted like the book i'd imagine, with notes and different font types and made to look like an old manuscript...all the things to get you in the mood for a pretend discovered narrative like this. Story was fine, characters fine. Wont run out to find something else by him.
 
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BooksForDinner | 1 other review | Sep 16, 2016 |
David Flusfeder’s John the Pupil is one of those books you enter like a world. Within a few sentences, you find yourself living inside of it—and your immediate surroundings become no more than white noise. The thirteenth century, in which it takes place, is an era of terror and knowledge.

The John of the title is a student of Roger Bacon. Along with two of his Franciscan brothers, John has been sent on a pilgrimage to Rome with the goal of delivering a new book by Bacon to the Pope, Clement IV. This journey is traveled on foot for the most part, and in the tradition of their order the Franciscans are expected to preach daily for alms that will provide them with food and, sometimes, housing.

The pace of the book is slow, as is a pilgrimage on foot. John records events on scraps of parchment, labeling the entries with the names of the Saints’ Days on which they were written. One day is much like the next: sore feet, the constant threat of violence, and an inner dialogue that John uses to try to understand the meaning of his journey even as he undertakes it. This pacing is part of what makes the book so all-consuming—it pulls readers into the rhythms of life from seven centuries ago.

Flusfeder’s prose is both beautiful and unadorned, true to the book’s era as is the pace. Wording is simple, but precise. Sparseness, rather than rich detail, is what brings these characters to life.

Give yourself the pleasure of reading this book. Let yourself settle into its rhythms and language and experience a world we left long ago.
… (more)
 
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Sarah-Hope | 1 other review | Mar 2, 2015 |

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Statistics

Works
10
Also by
3
Members
229
Popularity
#98,340
Rating
3.1
Reviews
2
ISBNs
38
Languages
4

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