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To Say Nothing of the Dog

To Say Nothing of the Dog

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Author: Connie Willis
Publisher: Bantam
Category: Book

List Price: $7.99
Buy Used: $1.40
You Save: $6.59 (82%)

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New (31) Used (51) Collectible (4) from $1.40

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 242 reviews
Sales Rank: 19245

Media: Mass Market Paperback
Pages: 512
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6
Dimensions (in): 6.8 x 4.2 x 1.1

ISBN: 0553575384
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54
EAN: 9780553575385
ASIN: 0553575384

Publication Date: December 1, 1998
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - To Say Nothing of the Dog
  • Turtleback - To Say Nothing of the Dog: How We Found the Bishop's Bird Stump at Last
  • Audio Download - To Say Nothing of the Dog: Or How We Found the Bishop's Bird Stump at Last (Unabridged)
  • Library Binding - To Say Nothing of the Dog
  • Hardcover - To Say Nothing of the Dog

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  • Three Men in a Boat: To Say Nothing of the Dog (Tor Classics)
  • Passage

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
To Say Nothing of the Dog is a science-fiction fantasy in the guise of an old-fashioned Victorian novel, complete with epigraphs, brief outlines, and a rather ugly boxer in three-quarters profile at the start of each chapter. Or is it a Victorian novel in the guise of a time-traveling tale, or a highly comic romp, or a great, allusive literary game, complete with spry references to Dorothy L. Sayers, Wilkie Collins, and Arthur Conan Doyle? Its title is the subtitle of Jerome K. Jerome's singular, and hilarious, Three Men in a Boat. In one scene the hero, Ned Henry, and his friends come upon Jerome, two men, and the dog Montmorency in--you guessed it--a boat. Jerome will later immortalize Ned's fumbling. (Or, more accurately, Jerome will earlier immortalize Ned's fumbling, because Ned is from the 21st century and Jerome from the 19th.)

What Connie Willis soon makes clear is that genre can go to the dogs. To Say Nothing of the Dog is a fine, and fun, romance--an amused examination of conceptions and misconceptions about other eras, other people. When we first meet Ned, in 1940, he and five other time jumpers are searching bombed-out Coventry Cathedral for the bishop's bird stump, an object about which neither he nor the reader will be clear for hundreds of pages. All he knows is that if they don't find it, the powerful Lady Schrapnell will keep sending them back in time, again and again and again. Once he's been whisked through the rather quaint Net back to the Oxford future, Ned is in a state of super time-lag. (Willis is happily unconcerned with futuristic vraisemblance, though Ned makes some obligatory references to "vids," "interactives," and "headrigs.") The only way Ned can get the necessary two weeks' R and R is to perform one more drop and recuperate in the past, away from Lady Schrapnell. Once he returns something to someone (he's too exhausted to understand what or to whom) on June 7, 1888, he's free.

Willis is concerned, however, as is her confused character, with getting Victoriana right, and Ned makes a good amateur anthropologist--entering one crowded room, he realizes that "the reason Victorian society was so restricted and repressed was that it was impossible to move without knocking something over." Though he's still not sure what he's supposed to bring back, various of his confederates keep popping back to set him to rights. To Say Nothing of the Dog is a shaggy-dog tale complete with a preternaturally quiet, time-traveling cat, Princess Arjumand, who might well be the cause of some serious temporal incongruities--for even a mouser might change the course of European history. In the end, readers might well be more interested in Ned's romance with a fellow historian than in the bishop's bird stump, and who will not rejoice in their first Net kiss, which lasts 169 years!

Product Description

From Connie Willis, winner of multiple Hugo and Nebula Awards, comes a comedic romp through an unpredictable world of mystery, love, and time travel...

Ned Henry is badly in need of a rest. He's been shuttling between the 21st century and the 1940s searching for a Victorian atrocity called the bishop's bird stump. It's part of a project to restore the famed Coventry Cathedral, destroyed in a Nazi air raid over a hundred years earlier.

But then Verity Kindle, a fellow time traveler, inadvertently brings back something from the past. Now Ned must jump back to the Victorian era to help Verity put things right--not only to save the project but to prevent altering history itself.


Customer Reviews:   Read 45 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Dogs, Cats & People Wandering Around Present & Past!   November 27, 2008
Maximiliano F Yofre (Buenos Aires, Argentina)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Ms. Willis (1945) has done a wonderful job with this book. "To Say Nothing of the Dog" (1998) is a Hugo winner and Nebula prize nominee.
Time travel is a classic sci-fi subject and there are different possible approaches. In this case the author chooses to play it in a comedic key; as opposite to her previous "Doomsday Book" much more tragic and dark.
Even if the story is a little slow to fully develop, after you pass the first thirty pages you are hooked and incapable to put down the novel.

Ms. Willis propose keen insights, even if joking, on human motivations shown between past (Victorian period & Coventry under the Blitz) and present (future actually as present is year 2058).
Characters are fully developed and show psychological and emotional depth. It is very interesting how Ms. Willis is able to penetrate deep personal traits masked under social roles as with Baines a classical butler of the era.

The reconstruction of Coventry's Cathedral under coercive command of Lady Schrapnell drive every member of Time Laboratory in search of Bishop's Bird Stump lost during Coventry's bombardment.
As they are trapped in labyrinthine adventures historians Ned Henry & Verity Kindle romp near Oxford in 1889 trying to untangle a complicated situation and giving way to hilarious situations.
The author pays several homages to Jerome K. Jerome, Agatha Christie, Tennyson and Lewis Carroll amongst other writers and poets.

Time travel is presented in a very coherent way, avoiding paradoxes, silly conflicts that spoil other novels and explaining coherently how the continuum forces such stability.
This is a book that may be enjoyed by sci-fi adepts as well as general public too!
Reviewed by Max Yofre.



3 out of 5 stars A fun and interesting romp -- eventually   November 9, 2008
Elizabeth Thyssen (San Francisco, CA)
I have to admit that I almost put the book down after the first fifty pages, and again after the first hundred pages. After that, however, I was hooked. The first part of the book relies too much on slapstick and a couple of characters that are really caricatures (Terence, Professor Peddick). However, the book eventually finds its stride, introducing characters that are interesting, funny, and easy to connect with. Also, the plot, which plods along for the first part of the book, becomes more and more intriguing. This book really would have been excellent with some judicious editing of the first half, but I'm glad I finished it.


5 out of 5 stars Wonderfully funny sci-fi   November 6, 2008
Randi K. Mclay (Riverside, CA USA)
To Say Nothing of the Dog is easily one of the funniest books I have ever read and the complexity of the "net" which allows the characters to travel thru time balances out the humor with a sense of dread and urgency. She does a great job of bring together actual historical events and making them relevant and recongnizable. I couldn't put this book down from the very beginning. Definitely a book to read for anyone who enjoys sci-fi.


5 out of 5 stars Get the audio version!   October 26, 2008
Denise (Nebraska)
I can't add anything new to these reviews except to say that the audio version - narrated by Steven Crossley - was an absolute stitch! His accent and dead-on voice characterizations are worth the effort to locate the discs. You can also try your local library. You won't be disappointed!



4 out of 5 stars Stumped By the Bishop's Bird Stump   July 30, 2008
themarsman (Georgetown, TX)
Ned Henry and Verity Kindle are historians from the second half of the 21st century. Their job is to travel back in time and study the past up close and personal. Ned has been stuck in 1940 for the past several weeks searching for a monstrosity called the Bishop's Bird Stump (which was located in Coventry Cathedral) for a wealthy patron of Oxford University and which was lost during the bombing of Coventry.

Verity finds herself in Victorian England (1888) and while there inadvertently brings something back to the 21st century that could change the course of history itself.

Now, Ned is sent to 1888 to help correct the timeline and get historic events back on track. There, along with Verity, both must not only figure out what has gone awry with history, but must also locate the Bishop's Bird Stump in time for the consecration of the newly rebuilt Coventry Cathedral in the 21st century.

To Say Nothing of the Dog is a wonderful old-fashioned mystery, awash with hints and clues throughout the book, yet the final puzzle is not solved (at the end, of course) until the characters use a path of logic way too complicated to ever to be fully understood...let alone determined by the reader before the ultimate denouement. And yet... the characterizations are extremely solid and the setting exquisitely detailed.

The main drawback to this book is that it took way too long for the plot to approach anything near interesting for more than brief half-page/page mini-spurts. Indeed, it took a full third of the book for the plot to begin focusing on the what the story was actually about (finding the Bishop's Bird Stump and getting history back on track) in a coherent manner that went beyond mere exposition. While exposition is generally a good thing and certainly necessary to construct a solid, focused plot, too much exposition, as in this book, can leave the story floundering to a point where some may just give up reading it entirely.

And that would be a shame... because once one gets past the first third of this book, one would see that it is a true work of art (even looking back on the first third) with an incredibly intricate plot, rich characters that one actually cares about and full of a literary "flavor" that one rarely sees in science fiction these days.


connie willis  humor  science fiction  sf time travel  time travel  
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