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Loading... Inkheart (original 2003; edition 2005)by Cornelia Funke
Work InformationInkheart by Cornelia Funke (2003)
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It's too long. Not in interesting ways that a book can be long, not extra character development or world development, just meaningless moments in scenes that are too long. Do I blame Anthea for not bringing it forward, or is it in the text? Oh, I was hoping to find something I could read in english and then in german, because that's the level my german has fallen to, but I don't want to do this one again. There's a much shorter story in here that could be good with some editing. ( ) I really enjoyed this audiobook. It's kind of ironic that I was listening to a book read aloud that talks about the power of reading a book aloud. I think Lynn Redgrave could be a "silvertongue"- I love the way she does the characters' voices. Especially Dustfinger. It was as if he was always whispering very intensely, like someone afraid of being caught. On paper, a great premise - a man can read characters into books when he reads them aloud, although the downside is that someone has to go back in to replace them. When the story starts, 12 year old Meggie is living a peripatetic life with her father, Mo, who earns a living as a bookbinder. She has inherited his love of books and doesn't miss her mother who "went away" 9 years ago. Later on, she learns that her mother disappeared into a novel read aloud by Mo, at the same time that a number of villains came out, including Capricorn, the ink hearted villain of the title. When the story opens, a strange man called Dustfinger who is also from the book, turns up to warn them that Capricorn is on their trail again - this is why they have moved around such a lot. Mo has been keeping everything secret from Meggie but now she gradually finds out about her father's gift and her mother's fate. Capricorn wants Mo to be permanently on call to read riches or anything else he wants out of books. When Mo, Meggie and Dustfinger escape to the house of Elinor, Meggie's mother's aunt, they only succeed in dragging her into danger as well. I have a few problems with the book. Firstly, it is far too long, with a story stretched to unfeasible lengths. Until the last few chapters, not a great deal happens other than various characters stumble round getting caught, escaping and getting caught again. After their first breakout from Capricorn's sinister village, Elinor goes home alone, even though the villains have already carried out one home invasion, while Mo and Meggie stay in the area for a number of days because the book's author lives there. Secondly, as well as acting foolishly, the characters aren't that well characterised and the villain is totally colourless with his henchman Basta outshining him. Mo comes across as selfish and absorbed in his desire to somehow read his wife out of the book in the first half of the story - only in the second does he appear to develop a care for his daughter. Quite a few others are self absorbed besides Mo (who we find late on is actually Mortimer), such as Dustfinger who wants to dump Farid, the boy from 1001 Nights who is probably the best character in the book, Elinor with her absorption in books and the book's author who delights in meeting his creations and doesn't take the situation seriously for a long time, considering that Capricorn's men have been terrorising his grandchildren. Also I admit to being put off Meggie when she reveals, early on, that she dislikes Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. There are also some clunky areas - for example, although I suppose when Elinor is introduced there is the subtle clue of her having a short neck, I was brought up abruptly when the villains suddenly started calling her "the fat woman" having gone through many chapters picturing her as a tall trim woman. Maybe it is a defect in translation, but it jarred and possibly translation issues are responsible for some of the other problems in this book. The basic idea is great, but if only the book being read from by Mo had been a great classic or two - what great fun could have been had with those characters brought into the real world - but unfortunately, Inkheart, the book within a book, despite its cast of thousands of fairies, trolls, giants et al, appears to be an extremely dull book judging by the humourless gang of goons making up Capricorn and his band of unmerry men. The resulting tale is a cross between a fantasy and a melodramatic story about the Mafia, so I am not at all tempted to read the sequels.
Such breathtaking things are going to happen, you cannot even imagine. SPECTACULAR!, FABULOUS! BREATHTAKING! If you've got to read a book it's got to be this one. Inkheart is a book about books, a celebration of and a warning about books. The "Inkheart" of the title is a book. I don't think I've ever read anything that conveys so well the joys, terrors and pitfalls of reading. ... When the villains are at last defeated and the denizens of the book tumble through into reality, it is quite disappointing to find them gaudy, small and trivial. Is Funke saying that, while books as books are wonderful, real life has a solid sort of grimness that renders make-believe flimsy? Or is she pleading with us to mix at least a little fantasy with our reality? I don't know. Inkheart leaves you asking such questions. And this is, to my mind, an important thing for a story to do. Is contained inAwardsDistinctionsNotable Lists
Twelve-year-old Meggie learns that her father, who repairs and binds books for a living, can "read" fictional characters to life when one of those characters abducts them and tries to force him into service. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)833.914Literature German literature and literatures of related languages German fiction Modern period (1900-) 1900-1990 1945-1990LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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