Friday, August 26, 2016

Book Review: The Night Circus (Erin Morgenstern)

(Posting this from December 12, 2014 and I've been a bit lazy for a revision)

This is my attempt in creating a review.

After all the efforts that I’ve gone through with the guidelines of writing a review, as well as reading samples from various blogs and references, I realized that this is not going to work if I stick too much with the formalities. I will write what I thought, when I thought them – and just let the common sense of reviewing get ahead with what I would write.

I have been reading a lot since I got to the province mainly to pass my time. I’ve lost count on the number of books that I’ve finished since September of this year, and the count still continues up to this date. I’m thinking of creating an inventory of the Titles that I’ve already finished, then composing my own review based on what I’ve contemplated on.


For now, I’ll start with the most recent read.

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Book Cover

The circus arrives without warning. No announcements precede it, no paper notices plastered on lampposts and billboards. It is simply there, when yesterday it was not.

Within these nocturnal black-and-white striped tents awaits an utterly unique, a feast for the senses, where one can get lost in a maze of clouds, meander through a lush garden made of ice, stare in wonderment as the tattooed contortionist folds herself into a small glass box, and become deliciously tipsy from the scents of caramel and cinnamon that waft through the air.

Welcome to Le Cirque des Rêves.

Beyond the smoke and mirrors, however, a fierce competition is under way--a contest between two young illusionists, Celia and Marco, who have been trained since childhood to compete in a "game" to which they have been irrevocably bound by their mercurial masters. Unbeknownst to the players, this is a game in which only one can be left standing, and the circus is but the stage for a remarkable battle of imagination and will.

As the circus travels around the world, the feats of magic gain fantastical new heights with every stop. The game is well under way and the lives of all those involved--the eccentric circus owner, the elusive contortionist, the mystical fortune-teller, and a pair of red-headed twins born backstage among them--are swept up in a wake of spells and charms.

But when Celia discovers that Marco is her adversary, they begin to think of the game not as a competition but as a wonderful collaboration. With no knowledge of how the game must end, they innocently tumble headfirst into love. A deep, passionate, and magical love that makes the lights flicker and the room grow warm whenever they so much as brush hands.

Their masters still pull the strings, however, and this unforeseen occurrence forces them to intervene with dangerous consequences, leaving the lives of everyone from the performers to the patrons hanging in the balance.

Both playful and seductive, The Night Circus, Erin Morgenstern's spell-casting debut, is a mesmerizing love story for the ages.
(Summary from Goodreads)



My initial thought for the theme dominant on the book were of Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet. The main characters of the story were pretty much star-crossed lovers, though not to the extreme that it includes clannish conflicts and first blood or all those dramatic murders and suicide.

Through the duration of the novel, brutality comes in the forms of, yes it was still there, death by unintentional murder and the heart-wrenching drama of losing someone one loved with the cliché of love stories and their rivals. These negative impacts were essential in the character build up and adds up to the character’s development with the story.

I wouldn’t want to delve too much with the details for fear of spoiling too much.

Characterization and what it entails were fine, I’d say, an average and I wouldn’t claim too much to be the ‘perfect’ well developed characters in a story. There are no wasted characters though there were some who seemed to have faded after exposing their role in the story. At least, in a sense that they were given a hastily concluded ending.

The story itself, I could rate on an above average scheme, as it gives the feeling that things were not what I had been expecting as I progress through the chapters. I never realized the importance of the dates and places prior to the beginning of the chapters until I got to Part II, where the discrepancies in time eventually converges giving the conclusion of the story its impact that it well deserved.

Overall, The Night Circus is a well-written novel, a must-read if I should say – I wouldn’t hesitate reading it over again.

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