
The Glass Ocean
Author: Lori Baker
Narrator: Cat Gould
Unabridged: 11 hr 7 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Blackstone Publishing
Published: 08/01/2013
Categories: Fiction, Sagas, Historical Fiction

Author: Lori Baker
Narrator: Cat Gould
Unabridged: 11 hr 7 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Blackstone Publishing
Published: 08/01/2013
Categories: Fiction, Sagas, Historical Fiction
Lori Baker is the author of Crash and Tell: Stories; Crazy Water: Six Fictions, which won the Mamdouha S. Bobst Literary Award; and Scraps. She has taught fiction writing, journalism, and composition at Brown University, Boston College, and Wheaton College in Norton, Massachusetts. She lives and works in Providence, Rhode Island.
Cat Gould grew up in Sydney, Australia, and after extensive travel moved to the United States in 1990. A classically trained actress with a BFA from Southern Oregon University, she has performed in many regional productions.
When I began reading this story I was barely trudging through and then the appearance of gems, which I plucked, in the form of sentences that suddenly changed the tone of the entire book for me. This strange novel pulled me in and it was a slow bleed. First, I have to address the feelings of frustra......more
POSSIBLE SPOILERS! Seductive prose that reflects the themes and conceits of the novel. The ocean, in the rhythms its tides and currents and strange depths is turned into flowing language and cadences. Somehow, Lori Baker also manages to marry art and science in her language: at times the poetic and d......more
This has to be one of the most beautifully written books I’ve read so far this year. The prose’s lushness left me stunned many times, and the story itself is delicately written. I loved the way the story was told, with the narrator weaving the plot along, almost making it happen as she imagines it.......more
Perhaps one of best and smartest books I've read -- the quality of the writing is amazing and the narrative shook me. Carlotta is trying to find her way in the face of being abandoned by both her mother and her father, and to understand their obsessions, their reasons for doing something so unthinka......more
This is an exquisite and harrowing work of literary fiction. So many images and passages will stay with me. I grew to care deeply for each of the three main characters – the heartbreaking narrator and her two exceptional parents – even when I did not always like what they did. I found myself marveli......more
“An adventure of dreamlike momentum and romantic intensity, brought alive by a storyteller with uncanny access to the Victorians, not only to the closely woven texture of their days but also to the dangerous nocturnal fires being attended to in their hearts.” Thomas Pynchon, National Book Award–winning author
“The Glass Ocean is that rarest of things, a historical novel, or at least a novel set in history, that is also a work of art. Lori Baker is a captivating storyteller, and her prose has the flash and fire of molten glass.” John Banville, Man Booker Prize–winning author
“Baker’s unforgettable tale is rich with nuance, buried passions, and Victorian oddities, offering passage into an extraordinary world.” Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“Hauntingly beautiful…Gorgeously written and elegantly evocative, Baker’s prose brings the Dell’oros’ world to life and drives home the tragedy of their fruitless longings.” Booklist (starred review)
“Set in the Victorian world but neither Dickensian nor steampunk, this debut novel by Bobst Literary Award winner Baker is narrated by red-haired, six-foot-plus Carlotta Dell’oro who relates the story of her parents' lives…. Love, art, and history; who can resist?” Library Journal
“There are dazzling passages, and the concrete details of glass manufacture reign in the mannered prose…Baker has gone all-in to capture Carlotta’s voice. This decision is admirable and risky. It is excessive, expressionistic.” Kirkus Reviews
“The Glass Ocean is breathtakingly good—as though Jean Rhys had come back from the dead to outdo Wide Sargasso Sea. So completely satisfying (as well as satisfyingly disturbing) that at the end one doesn’t wish it would go on forever because the ending itself is so beautifully right. Hat, shirt, and shoes off to a wizard of fiction.” Harry Mathews, author of The Conversions