Cover Image: The Shadow Land

The Shadow Land

Pub Date:   |   Archive Date:

Member Reviews

A young American woman, Alexandra Boyd, has traveled to Sofia, Bulgaria, hoping that life abroad will salve the wounds left by the loss of her beloved brother. Soon after arriving in this elegant East European city, however, she helps an elderly couple into a taxi and realizes too late that she has accidentally kept one of their bags. Inside she finds an ornately carved wooden box engraved with a name: Stoyan Lazarov. Raising the hinged lid, she discovers that she is holding an urn filled with human ashes.
As Alexandra sets out to locate the family and return this precious item, she will first have to uncover the secrets of a talented musician who was shattered by political oppression and she will find out all too quickly that this knowledge is fraught with its own danger.
Kostova s new novel is a tale of immense scope that delves into the horrors of a century and traverses the culture and landscape of this mysterious country. Suspenseful and beautifully written, it explores the power of stories, the pull of the past, and the hope and meaning that can sometimes be found in the aftermath of loss.

Does not disappoint.

Was this review helpful?

What on earth is going on with Elizabeth Kostova? The Historian is one of my most favourite books. This is not! It is beautifully written as are all Kostova's books but after her debut things have most definitely been rocky, this was better than the Swan Thieves- marginally I might add! Maybe she has suffered peaking too soon in her career but this book despite; its writing being beautiful with great flow, was very diffficult to get through and I did have to read it in bursts! A disappointment to me!

Was this review helpful?

I wanted to like this book much more than I actually did. I just couldn't buy into the mystery and the idea of Alexandra driving all around a country that she never been with a cab driver that she just met to try and find someone that she does not know.

The description's of the country was beautiful and kept me going.

Was this review helpful?

some reviewers have compared shadow lands to the historian. where kostavas debut novel was longer in length it was fast paced shadow lands isn't at all fast paced. but the writing is more mature kostova seems surer of herself in her latest novel. the slow pace was frustrating at moments to me because I am a very plot heavy story driven reader. but once i settled into the lush language of this title I relaxed enough to appreciate there are many ways to tell a story.

the plot of this story is almost shadow thin, but overall this book may be compared to Seinfeld in that one reviewer at the peak of the sitcom' s popularity commented on how a show "about nothing" had so much content it was almost about everything
in other words if you just read the surface text of kostova's novel you may miss the amazing layer of depth the subtext holds. I loved this title despite being as aforementioned a plot heavy reader and hopefully others will too.

Was this review helpful?

Thank you to NetGalley for allowing me to read the advanced copy of The Shadow Land by Elizabeth Kostova. What an exciting adventure for young Alexandra as she comes to Bulgaria to teach, picks up the wrong luggage and becomes involved in a mystery dating back many years. As Bobby, a part time cab driver, leads her across the country to find the owners of the mysterious parcel, she learns about the country, its history, the people who lived here, and what she values in her own life. This is a memorable book I will think about for a long time and will recommend it to my book club and friends.

Was this review helpful?

Having lived and worked in Eastern Europe for a long time, of all the countries Bulgaria is the one I knew least about and I have to say I know a lot more after reading this novel. It's not so much a mystery story as a discovery and it's clear the author understands some of the country's history well, especially the human aspect of it. What always hit me most with communist regimes was the total randomness of it all. One could get punished or exiled and never really know why. Bulgaria shares much of this kind of history with the other former East block countries and, like these countries it transitioned into another kind of corruption, this one of a more economic nature. Elizabeth Kostova manages to give her readers all of this in a nutshell. Enjoyable and enlightening.

Was this review helpful?

Oh.
My.
Word...

I have been waiting and waiting and waiting for Kostova's new book to be released and was SO excited that NetGalley let me review an advance copy of it!

Long story short--and it is a dense, lengthy read--it did not disappoint. What I love about Kostova's writing is that I get so lost in her world that she creates; I have such a hard time coming back up for air after it's done. I fell in love with her writing in The Historian. I didn't even know that the book was about Dracula until I was already so involved with the characters and the plot, that I didn't care that it was about vampires...or I should say--THE vampire. I think this is part of her genius as a writer--she can write about ANYTHING and it is moving, beautiful, and engaging. When people ask what her books are about, I have such a hard time providing a succinct summary. How do you summarize a piece of art?

The Shadow Land totally lived up to my expectations and hopes! I was over halfway through the book and still had no idea what was going on, what was going to happen, or who I wanted to learn about the most. Kostova's haunting tale about love, forgiveness, and family walks along two uniquely tangled timelines in Bulgaria. History buffs will love her vivid (sometimes horrifying and heartbreaking) description of what the people of Bulgaria have gone through. The book also appeals to readers who love music, literature, and a small sprinkling of magic in their books.

I can't really describe the storyline without giving too much away, but you really should read this book. I finished it two days ago and I still cannot stop seeing the characters when I close my eyes.

Was this review helpful?

The author had previous success with her book The Historian, which is also on my future reading list, so I had opened this one with high hopes. We have a young American woman, Alexandra, who travels to Bulgaria to teach in honor of the memory of her dead brother who had wanted to visit the country. Alexandra, during her first few minutes in the city of Sofia, accidentally finds herself with someone else’s luggage. Once she discovers that she has someone else’s bag she is determined to find them to return it to them as the bag contains human ashes. Therein her adventure starts.

What struck me most about The Shadow Land is how the author, Kostova, is able to paint such beautiful pictures with her words. The book has enough detail to make the story clear in my mind without being obvious about it. She describes the towns that Alexandra visits so well that the descriptions themselves are enough to engulf me in the book. I think that is an art unto itself. Most books pull you in with their general story and plot, Kostova got me hooked with her lovingly rendered locations. I’ve run across very few author’s who are able to do that.

That being said…

If it wasn’t her descriptions the book wouldn’t be worth reading. Once Alexandra discovers she has someone else’s belongings she has her cab driver take her to the police to report it. What is the obvious thing to do at this point? Leave the bag with the police. What does Alexandra do? She and her cab driver named Bobby traipse all over the country to try to return the bag to it’s owner. Yes, how very nice of her etc etc. Despite being nice it is ridiculous. She is in a country she has never been to where they speak a language she does not know where she and her cab driver that she also doesn’t know drive all over creation to find people she doesn’t know. With all honesty, without Bobby the story would be completely unreadable. Alexandra follows him and his orders like a puppy. She seems to have no original thoughts outside of the occasional ramble about her dead brother. Without her brother she would have absolutely zero personality or thoughts. It is infuriating.

The most interesting character in this story is, funnily enough, the dead man whose ashes she is carting around. During flash backs we get to see the man’s, Stoyan, life. He was an accomplished violinist and through a very simple error ended up a political prisoner. During his story we are with him in a prison forced labor camp. It breaks my heart all this man goes through trying to get back to his wife. The poor man certainly didn’t get a happily-ever-after.

I wanted to love this book. I really did. I couldn’t. I spent more time reading it getting frustrated with what seemed a pointless endeavor than anything else. All the beautiful story telling in the world couldn’t salvage it for me. After reading over 400 pages the conclusion, when you actually find out what was going on, is maybe three paragraphs. I wanted to throw it. I read that part twice hoping I had missed something that would make the rest of the story worth it but I was just left, well, frustrated. Not the kind of book I wanted to start the new year with.

Was this review helpful?