Cirque Du So Slow And Stunning Magical Visuals

The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


“This is not magic. This is the way the world is, only very few people take the time to stop and note it.”

The Night Circus, at its most basic level, is about a challenge that takes place within the confines of a circus. It starts with two gentlemen who make a wager and then train their two students in this game. They are very coy about the details and we are left to take the clues that are dropped throughout the book to deduce what we think it entails. They move to the periphery but are ever present. The story then focuses on the students and the circus. The two students (one male and one female) are bound to compete. They do this using their unique abilities. Overall, the book is about the magical and the love that develops between two formal rivals. A circus is built as the arena in which the competition materializes and people get to enjoy it all over the world as it travels from city to city. We get to learn about the many people involved and how they interact and contribute to the competition. It is a fantasy novel but realistic in nature.

I have heard good things about this book and it did sound like something that was up my alley. It sounded magical, beautiful, and enchanting. When I started reading it, I could see all of it. I was excited to continue as I was intrigued and pulled in right away. The premise was promising and I was roused to continue by how Erin Morgenstern captured my attention. Now, I normally do not like books that take a second person point of view but the author did it right from the very beginning. Let me clarify, the whole book is not second-person, but there are chapters sprinkled throughout that really draw you in and make you feel like you are actually there. I could vividly picture myself walking around and experiencing what was being described. It made me think of those choose-your-own-adventure novels or a fantasy video game which I loved. The visuals that were invoked in my mind were stunning. I wish something like this really existed. There were many characters that were introduced. Each character was unique, and it was pretty easy to know who was being referenced but it did take a few scenes to get there. I really did like a lot of the characters and what they brought to the novel. Despite all those good things, it did take me a little longer than normal to get through this one. It might not have been the right book at the right time for me but I did finish and found some delight in it. It was a very slow and methodically written novel. At first, I didn’t find it boring though as it sounded ethereal and I still had expectations left in me. I didn’t mind the slowness as it was still early in the book and things were building but then excitement or a driving plot never materialized. I was forcing myself to pick it back up to read just a little more to finally finish it. I was hoping for so much more. I wanted a stronger story and I felt let down.


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Sleepwalking Through Life and Other Disasters To Wake Up The World

Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


Station Eleven is a tale about multiple characters and a pandemic that wiped out an untold amount of people here on the planet. It jumps between moments in time and locations. I actually liked how this was done. Sometimes, when authors choose this path, it can be confusing and annoying but, in this case, it heightened the suspense and investment in the story. I felt like I was taken by the hand and brought along for the journey as I was experiencing everything firsthand. I did like Miranda a lot as she seemed chill and had an approach to life like “well this is how it is”. The author drops these little nuggets of foreshadowing that creates an ominous read which drew me in and I was hooked by page 25. I have always like disaster or survival stories and this one fits the bill wonderfully. I loved how Star Trek was mentioned at several points and a key phrase as the mantra of one group. I am a huge Star Trek nerd and it made me smile. Emily St. John Mandel does an amazing job of connecting people and events. She weaves a history and connectedness between things that is brilliant. There was a scene where a snow globe gets described but then also all the people and steps it took to make it, including truck drivers and people that package the globe. The way she also points out explicitly and aptly what life was like before and how humans interacted with the world was perfection. The depth and brilliance are lyrical. There was a description of friendship with respect to expectations and the work needed that really resonated with me. I was immersed in the world and enveloped by the prose. As one character put it, were they (are we?) just sleepwalking through life with our jobs, life, and what counts for happiness? Clark mused on in his past how he would take redeyes from NYC to LA and marvel at the sun rising as “the world was waking up.” Maybe, the world does really need to wake up and this is what took it to happen. Overall, this was a superbly written novel that brings forth all the feels and is so strongly rooted in possible reality to make it scarily relatable.

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