The Invisible Library starts out with aplomb. Irene, our protagonist, is an Undercover Librarian. That’s it, I’m
already sold on this book. She’s on a secret mission to retrieve a rare and
unique book from the library of a wizards’ boarding school. Seriously, if you
aren’t immediately putting this book in your shopping basket after that
sentence, there is something wrong with you. Her heist - yes, a full-blown
heist with booby-traps and tight timings and a great big chase and a narrow
escape - is fast, thrilling, witty, and only the first chapter.
After
returning to the Invisible Library (a mysterious, huge, timeless entity, existing
between dimensions and parallel worlds; a library where people can travel for
days among the bookshelves to get from one area to another, set inside an even
more mysterious city that the Librarians never enter, occasionally glimpse from
their windows, and know nothing about), Irene suddenly finds herself given a
new, urgent assignment in different universe, and her first ever apprentice. Oh, and she actually has a personal nemesis among her Librarian colleagues.
The
Invisible Library is great fun to read. A brisk pace, a sense of humour, and a likeable
protagonist make this a near-perfect novel for grown-ups whose inner kids (and
inner young adults) are alive and well and thirsting for tales of adventure.
I’ve seen it
compared to Doctor Who, I’m sure it’ll be compared to Harry Potter, and it’ll
probably get compared to every Anglophile novel full of vim and fun that’s ever
been written. These comparisons will all be well-earned: it’s a highly
pleasurable read. Big adventures, clever detectives, magic, fey folk, cyborgs,
dragons, zeppelins, secrets, conspiracies... and best of all, it has unlimited potential
for future novels.
Let’s put it
like this: if you like Paul Magrs’ Brenda and Effie series, or Indiana Jones,
or Ben Aaronovitch’s Peter Grant novels, or Inkheart, then I think it’s a
fairly safe bet that The Invisible Library will be right up your street, too.
Rating:
4.5/5
2 comments:
It took me a whole painful month to read this novel. Usually chapter breaks tease and entice me to continue reading. In this case they were a welcome break. Weird how two intelligent people can have the complete opposite reaction to the same text. In future I shall take your fantasy recommendations which a very large pinch of salt.
Fair enough. Though I must admit, I've been getting the impression that you don't enjoy very many books or movies at all... You seem to be an even harsher reader than I am.
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