So has anyone read Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell by Susanna Clarke? I did and I absolutely loved it. I've heard it described as "Harry Potter for grown-ups", but that's almost an insult, in my opinion.. and I love Harry Potter. This book just goes alot deeper... it considers political and spiritual and personal effects and ramifications of magic, etc. It's kinda like Donnie Darko, tricky to explain. It's set mostly in England, during the time of the Napoleonic Wars.
"Can a magician kill a man by magic?" Lord Wellington asked Strange.
Strange frowned. He seemed to dislike the question. "I suppose a magician might," he admitted, "but a gentleman never could."
And here's another one of my favourite passages from it, slightly longer: (not a spoiler)
Captain Harcourt-Bruce was not only dashing, handsome, and brave, he was also rather romantic. The reappearance of magic in England thrilled him immensely. He was a great reader of the more exciting sort of history - and his head was full of ancient battles in which the English were outnumbered by the French and doomed to die, when all at once would be heard the sound of strange, unearthly music, and upon a hilltop would appear the Raven King in his tall, black helmet with it's mantling of raven-feathers streaming in the wind; he would gallop down the hillside on his tall, black horse with a hundred human knights and a hundred fairy knights at his back, and he would defeat the French by magic.
That was Captain Harcourt-Bruce's idea of a magician. That was the sort of thing which he now expected to see reproduced on every battlefield on the Continent. So when he saw Mr Norrell in his drawing-room in Hanoversquare, and after he had sat and watched Mr Norrell peevishly complain to his footman, first that the cream in his tea was too creamy, and next that it was too watery - well, I shall not surprize you when I say he was somewhat disappointed. In fact he was so downcast by the whole undertaking that Admiral Paycocke, a bluff old gentleman, felt rather sorry for him and only had the heart to laugh at him and tease him very moderately about it.
So read it! I'd highly recommend it. Or, if you've alread read it... what did you think?