Book review — The Midnight Library by Matt Haig

in BDCommunitylast year (edited)

The Midnight Library

by Matt Haig


323624300_596220599177956_8137403005455190899_n.jpg

It is no secret I mostly read the classics to save me from disappointment and better utilization of time. It’s been years since I’ve last picked a book written after 2010 but when The Midnight Library was suggested to me, I was curious.

A fantasy book about libraries? – Cool! Count me in! That’s what I thought when I first encountered the synopsis of The midnight library. Apparently, this book also won the Goodreads yearly award of the best fantasy book of 2018 and was quite popular. But I was not to be convinced by that as I don’t care for it but the synopsis caught me off guard. When you are about to die, you end up in a library and you are given the option to explore alternate lives you never lived and could possibly have lived and you can amend your regrets along the way. What will you do in such a case?

The protagonist of the book, Nora Seed is apparently a failed human being, driven to the door of suicide by pent-up guilt, losing her job, and being all alone with no family and relationship. When her attempted suicide takes her to a mysterious place, a magical library of a sort, with a stern-looking librarian in it who for the sake of convenience resembles her high school librarian. She tells her there are an infinite number of books in that library and each of them is a version of life Nora could have lived. And she still can, if she chooses to. She can envision any life where she could turn back any decision she regrets. Lives where she became a rockstar, went through her marriage with her boyfriend, or continued her swimming career to be an Olympic gold winner athlete. Or even the ones she didn’t or couldn't imagine and are in no way connected to her life whatsoever. Initially, Nora reluctantly explores a few versions of her life, being quite fed up with life, but soon she rekindles some love for the act of living and starts exploring lives. Will she find the perfect life for her?

The book had a great start story-wise. I also liked the protagonist Nora. She is a philosophy major and her favorite philosopher is Henry David Thoreau. Well, so is mine. Her cat is named after Voltaire, another of my favorite philosophers. Throughout the book there are lots of agreeable quotes from both of them and it was pleasant for me too.
The problem is that it starts to resemble a self-help book under the disguise of a fantasy one. I personally despise self-help books and have no interest in them. As Nora explores her lives, she is faced with a cheesy cheap realization only a self-help writer could think of and this was such a turn-off for me. Still, the book was pleasant enough that I continued to read it. I guess I also felt the need for a closure of the story, the lives she finds and whether she finds the happy life she seeks. But in the end, it was a disappointing read. Fun, but not memorable.

I will never read this again, and can’t recommend it to anyone either. But if you don't mind self-help and need some confirmation bias, be my guest.

divider 1.png

Photo belongs to me

hive format 2.jpg

Hive footer notacinephile.gif

Sort:  

I read this book last year... Agree that at first it was an interesting read but towards the end, I got bored reading it. There were just too many lives she had to visit through the Midnight Library.

I love self-help books and I got a handful of lessons or shall I say, reminders from the book. After reading it, I had to scan through the years I've lived and found that there were moments I'd like to go back to and change those if given the chance. But ultimately, the best life is the life I'm living now. And that's the one I have control over.

Any book you can recommend? Despite my busy schedule, I try to finish at least one book a month.

I've read a lot of self-help books actually, around the ballpark of 30-40 and it appears to me that they all say the same with lots of words, things that could be said in a blog post. Not to mention, some of the things don't apply to most people anyway. Hence my disagreement with the genre.

Yeah, you're right about the one life we live. At least, this is the only life we are getting anyway, and trying to make the best of it is a no-brainer.

A book a month is a fine goal. What kind of books do you like?
Have you read Kafka's Metamorphosis? or, Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray?

My name is Antonio Manuel Nápoles Rivero and I am a member of the hive community.
Cinema is one of my passions and together with sports and my family is one of the things I enjoy the most. I am not a critic or specialist in the subject, but I like to write about it.

I have not been able to write because they tell me that I must do it from a page, I do not know the language in which it should be published or if two are accepted, I would appreciate any help, to write in this community that I like very much.
Greetings and best regards

Hi @notacinephile, your post has been upvoted by @bdcommunity courtesy of @rem-steem!


Support us by voting as a Hive Witness and/or by delegating HIVE POWER.

JOIN US ON