Join a book club that is reading Time Shelter: A Novel!

Chichester Readers

Welcome to Chichester Readers; a group of people who love books. The general idea is to meet every month or so, all having read the same book and to have a bit of a natter over a glass or two of wine. Marvellous!


The Book Club has some guidelines which we follow or ignore as we choose. The “rules” are as follows:


1st Rule of Book Club: The readers choose the next read in a 'democratic' process


2nd Rule of Book Club: You may talk about Book Club


3rd Rule of Book Club: We don't choose a read that any of the readers have already read


4th Rule of Book Club: Readers bring suggestions for the next read to the Meetup


5th Rule of Book Club: We're happy to read anything as long as it is in paperback at a reasonable price


The sixth unwritten rule is that any book over about 550 pages doesn't make it through the voting process. People with a lot to do besides reading a book just don't have the time for DAVID COPPERFIELD in a month!


SO DON'T DELAY, SIGN UP TODAY!

The Chicago Eclectic Reader

Join if you enjoy reading for both entertainment and enrichment. This book club features varied genres and authors.

Time Shelter: A Novel

"At one point they tried to calculate when time began, when exactly the earth had been created," begins Time Shelter's enigmatic narrator, who will go unnamed. "In the mid-seventeenth century, the Irish bishop Ussher calculated not only the exact year, but also a starting date: October 22, 4,004 years before Christ." But for our narrator, time as he knows it begins when he meets Gaustine, a "vagrant in time" who has distanced his life from contemporary reality by reading old news, wearing tattered old clothes, and haunting the lost avenues of the twentieth century.

In an apricot-colored building in Zurich, surrounded by curiously planted forget-me-nots, Gaustine has opened the first "clinic for the past," an institution that offers an inspired treatment for Alzheimer's sufferers: each floor reproduces a past decade in minute detail, allowing patients to transport themselves back in time to unlock what is left of their fading memories. Serving as Gaustine's assistant, the narrator is tasked with collecting the flotsam and jetsam of the past, from 1960s furniture and 1940s shirt buttons to nostalgic scents and even wisps of afternoon light. But as the charade becomes more convincing, an increasing number of healthy people seek out the clinic to escape from the dead-end of their daily lives--a development that results in an unexpected conundrum when the past begins to invade the present. Through sharply satirical, labyrinth-like vignettes reminiscent of Italo Calvino and Franz Kafka, the narrator recounts in breathtaking prose just how he became entrenched in a plot to stop time itself.

"A trickster at heart, and often very funny" (Garth Greenwell, The New Yorker), prolific Bulgarian author Georgi Gospodinov masterfully stalks the tragedies of the last century, including our own, in what becomes a haunting and eerily prescient novel teeming with ideas. Exquisitely translated by Angela Rodel, Time Shelter is a truly unforgettable classic from "one of Europe's most fascinating and irreplaceable novelists" (Dave Eggers).

BUY THE BOOK

304 pages

Average rating: 5.6

25 RATINGS

Community Reviews

See why thousands of readers are using Bookclubs to stay connected.