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Monday, May 7, 2012

The Night Circus

The circus isn't really my thing, so I ignored the buzz about this book until just recently, when I found out that our library system is staging a Midsummer's Eve event based on The Night Circus (#182) by Erin Morgenstern.  I was curious then, so I put it on my list, and Reader, am I glad I did!  This book is magical.

The Night Circus arrives in town without warning, does not open until sundown, and provides those lucky enough to visit with a myriad of choices, each attraction housed in an individual black and white striped tent.  The fragrances are more wonderful than you can imagine, and all the food and drink tastes better there.  But there's more going on here at the circus.  It is the setting for a challenge for Celia and Marco, the apprentices of two old masters of magic.  These players are unaware of the rules, or even who their opponents are initially, as they meet, fall in love, and slowly come to realize that the game they are unwillingly playing is stacked against them to produce only one winner.

Though the story begins in the 1870s, most of the action takes place in an elegant fin de siecle world of black, white and silver.  The patrons who are invited to contribute to the ambiance of the Cirque des Reves form a colorful contrast to the monochromatic fantasy they create; Lefevre, the rich eccentric and proprietor of this undertaking, Mr. Barris, the engineer providing a platform of reality to build on, Tante Pavda, the elderly former ballerina turned couturier extraordinaire, the Burgess sisters who provide exactly the right dashes of panache, and Friedrick Thiessen, creator of the astonishing clock that greets visitors at the Cirque's entrance.  And then there are the characters who people the circus itself - the contortionist, the illusionist, the acrobats, the fortune teller, and the red-haired twins born the night the circus opens - with their magical skills.

There are also a group of people from all over the world who are called reveurs.   They are the true fans of the Cirque de Reves who recognize each other at the circus by their black and white clothing punctuated by a shock of red.  By the end of the book, I longed to join their number.  The biggest disappointment in this book is that you know that the Cirque des Reves will never arrive at your town so you can experience its wonders for yourself.  For now, it's enough to immerse yourself in this enchanting book.

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