Alice Teh Larsson

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Inkheart

I must admit when I was a young girl, I slept with my books. I would tuck my Nancy Drew mystery (or any other book) and slid an arm under my pillow to prop it up a little bit while at the same time felt for it to ensure that it was still there. So when I read that sentence at the start of Inkheart, I got really excited. I am sure a lot of book-lovers are like that as well. Come on, admit it! *GRIN*

In Inkheart, Meggie’s father, Mortimer Folchart (Meggie calls him Mo for short), has a peculiar ability. Characters literally come to life when he reads aloud from books. When Meggie was a baby, he reads from Inkheart and several of the book’s wicked characters ‘crashed’ into his cottage. Actually, that is not the first time he discovered his power. When the mayhem is over i.e. after he read Capricorn (the baddie) and some of his men out of the book, he discovers something even worse, he had read his wife INTO the story! So the modus operandi is this: when something is read out, something has to go in as well. Meggie never knew what happened to her mother but only the vague remark by her father saying she went away.

The now twelve-year-old Meggie does not know that her father possesses this power. She also does not question why her father never read aloud to her, at least not until it is brought to her awareness by the bad guys. Capricorn has searched for Mo for years and calls him Silvertongue. He has ‘plans’ for Mo and to accomplish his dark goals, uses Meggie to force her father into compliance—that is, read out loud.

Other important characters such as Dustfinger (a talented two-faced guy who plays and performs with fire); Meggie’s bookworm aunt, Elinor; Fenoglio, the author of Inkheart; and even Dustfinger’s horned marten named Gwin—they make the story all the more engaging. Elinor and Fenoglio are dragged into the mess and suffer terrible consequences, especially Elinor. Poor, poor, Elinor and her books… Do read Inkheart to find out what happened.

This is a good story and one that keeps the reader engaged until the end. I firmly believe that book-lovers will appreciate it even more and would understand the obsession with ink and paper. I love the ending. And now I look forward to reading the second book, Inkspell, in the trilogy.