Piranesi May 2026

By the end, when the outside world finally intrudes with its police, its psychologists, and its flat, gray reality, you may feel a strange pang of loss. The resolution is satisfying—justice is done, the truth is uncovered—but Clarke leaves a sliver of doubt. Is the “real world” any more real than the House? Are the cubicles and commutes any less of a labyrinth than the flooded halls?

The novel is a conversation with its namesake, the 18th-century artist Giovanni Battista Piranesi, whose Imaginary Prisons etchings depicted vast, impossible dungeons of stairs, arches, and machinery. Clarke takes those terrifying, oppressive spaces and inverts them. Her House is the same architecture, but lit by a different sun. What was a prison becomes a cathedral. What was a nightmare becomes a place of worship. Piranesi

Because Piranesi is a mystery, but not a violent one. It’s a thriller without a chase scene. The dread creeps in not through shadows, but through the narrator’s own missing memories. Slowly, like water seeping through stone, the reader realizes what Piranesi cannot: his happiness is built on a foundation of amnesia. He has forgotten a world of desks, cars, cities, and crowds. He has forgotten his own name. The beautiful House, with its birds and its benevolent tides, is both a sanctuary and a prison—a gilded cage constructed by a manipulative mind. By the end, when the outside world finally

Piranesi is a short book, but it contains a universe. It is a story about madness that is actually about sanity. A story about prisons that is actually about freedom. And above all, it is an ode to the quiet, observant soul—the person who finds meaning not in power or knowledge, but in the patient act of bearing witness. To read it is to walk those halls yourself. And like Piranesi, you may not want to leave. Are the cubicles and commutes any less of

There is a key in your left hand. A skeleton lies in the tidal hall on the lower west side. The statues—thirteen, no, wait, perhaps ninety-three—watch with serene, weathered faces as you pass. The tides rise twice a day, flooding the labyrinthine corridors with salt and silence. This is the World.