The advent of a new year often brings about a great deal of
reflection about the one slipping into the past. What milestones occurred? What
were your favorite movies, songs, sporting triumphs and other such listable
things? Of course, here at Musings from a Leather Chair, what I really care
about is the best books of 2012, at least out of the ones I read. It seems
almost serendipitous that I would read what I hands down consider to be the
best book of this year (and perhaps this decade) right at the end of the year,
just in the nick of time. Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern enthralled me
for the last week of 2012 and is how you should usher in 2013.
Night
Circus was a novel I had been hearing about for quite a while. I would see
it in bookstores and be drawn to its artsy cover that uses only red, black and
white. I wouldn’t know this design was important to the actual plot of the
story, but somehow I would feel connected to the book. Of course, I would then
hem and haw about paying full price for a hard cover and walk away empty
handed. That is until I was in my favorite used bookstore and found a paperback
copy. I had it up at the counter as fast as I could move and dove into it as
soon as I got home. Instead of then continuing to frantically read, flipping pages
in a frenzy of energy, I slowed down. Night Circus is the first book in
a long while that I savored. I read carefully, the plot pulling me along at
just the right pace, keeping me engrossed in the story but not hurling too much
at me at once. I had time to get a feel for each of the different characters
and to understand how their lives would intersect by means of the most
extraordinary circus ever imagined. It definitely helps that I happened to be
on vacation when I was reading the majority of Night Circus. A beach in
Jamaica will make anyone pause and linger over something enjoyable, and so I
spent my days in the sun with Night Circus in hand, not wanting the
story to end but dying to know what would happen next.
The
novel focuses on two competing magicians and their respective protégés, both of
whom are pitted against each other in a lifelong competition of endurance and
skill. The two young competitors know they are playing against each other but
the scope of this test takes time to sink in, and as they each work within the
circus to create wonders that are actually magical but taken as enchanting
tricks, they slowly fall in love. It is an all-encompassing love that fills
them and drives the second half of the novel to its thrilling and completely unexpected
conclusion. It is also a relatively believable love, as far as stories go.
Marco and Celia, the two illusionists, go through separation and jealousy and
all the rest of the hurdles life throws at lovers, and it is their struggle
that makes them human. There is something incredibly erotic about the dark
setting of the circus and their competition against each other that suits the
adult who wants to be enchanted but not coddled. Marco and Celia may possess
magic of sorts, but magic isn’t a savior in Night Circus. It is more of
a tormenting force kept at bay and twisted for good instead of consuming the
world for evil.
Most
of the story takes place within the confines of Le Cirque de Reves, or the
Circus of Dreams, a creation thought up by an English theatrical producer and
several intriguingly quirky dreamers who attend his infamous Midnight Dinners.
What the creators do not know is that one of those dreamers, the mysterious Mr.
A.H, is actually Marco’s teacher and building up the circus as the arena for
the competition. Still, competition space or no, the circus thrives when it
finally becomes a reality, delighting audiences’ world wide with its mystery
and its wonders. The circus only opens after dark and while it holds the same
features of a circus in the late 1800’s, it also hides magic behind every
corner. Think the circus from Water for Elephants plus an infusion of The
Prestige type magic with a dash of Harry
Potter for flavor. All in all, a delightful space for a novel to tell its
story.
Morgenstern
takes an interesting approach to novel writing, splitting her sections into the
past and present and working from multiple points of view. Her sections in the
present are written in second person and immediately gripping, while her
sections in the past are written in the present tense and seems to involve the
reader more intimately than other stories. She is skilled at leaving mysteries
for the reader to figure out. A character is never presented from all sides.
There are parts to everyone that are left in the dark and we never fully get to
figure any one person out. This makes for an active reading experience, as I
was certainly always trying to piece things together and figure out the puzzle
before the story would let me. I believe it is the mark of Morgenstern’s
elegance and craft that this mystery did not distract me from the story but
made me love it even more. Her words are straightforward but intoxicating,
poetic but crisp at the same time. By the end of the novel I agreed with every
review that was calling Night Circus “hauntingly beautiful” because that
is exactly what it is.
If
you want magic, love, adventure, growing up, deception, action, dark fairytales
and a down right beautifully suspenseful novel, read Night Circus. I am
dubbing it the best book of 2012 and certainly looking forward to any more work
Morgenstern produces in the future.
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