Catship reviewed Every Heart a Doorway by Seanan McGuire (Wayward Children, #1)
:)
5 stars
I like it a lot.
176 pages
English language
Published Sept. 9, 2016 by Tom Doherty Associates.
Children have always disappeared under the right conditions; slipping through the shadows under a bed or at the back of a wardrobe, tumbling down rabbit holes and into old wells, and emerging somewhere... else.
But magical lands have little need for used-up miracle children.
Nancy tumbled once, but now she’s back. The things she’s experienced... they change a person. The children under Miss West’s care understand all too well. And each of them is seeking a way back to their own fantasy world.
But Nancy’s arrival marks a change at the Home. There’s a darkness just around each corner, and when tragedy strikes, it’s up to Nancy and her new-found schoolmates to get to the heart of the matter.
No matter the cost.
I like it a lot.
Lovely macabre mystery.
Themes of acceptance, friendship, and the odd angles in all of us.
LGBTQ+ positive
About the audio version: the reader has a flat affect. I assume this is to connect with the main character. However, enough of the book is narration that I feel that flat affect could have been reserved for the main character's voice rather than the bulk of the book. It did bother me some, but didn't ruin the book for me.
If you don't mind the formulas of fantasy writing, then stop reading this review and read the book. You'll love it. There's a very interesting protagonist and a strong ending.
In the early chapters, there were two fantasy-style formulasat play: excessive descriptions and the use of phrases like "seemed like" or "it was as if..." If these writing devices are used before the characters are establishes, it pulls me out of the story. Because I'm asking, "Who sees the world this way?" or "Seemed like to whom?" Without a narrator character or a POV, then the devices fall flat to me.
Okay, rant done. The book was saved by a protagonist that has a very interesting motivation and way of seeing things. Plus the ending is very satisfying. I'll rate this as 3/5 and check out the next book in the series. Maybe I'll lift to 4 if the series …
If you don't mind the formulas of fantasy writing, then stop reading this review and read the book. You'll love it. There's a very interesting protagonist and a strong ending.
In the early chapters, there were two fantasy-style formulasat play: excessive descriptions and the use of phrases like "seemed like" or "it was as if..." If these writing devices are used before the characters are establishes, it pulls me out of the story. Because I'm asking, "Who sees the world this way?" or "Seemed like to whom?" Without a narrator character or a POV, then the devices fall flat to me.
Okay, rant done. The book was saved by a protagonist that has a very interesting motivation and way of seeing things. Plus the ending is very satisfying. I'll rate this as 3/5 and check out the next book in the series. Maybe I'll lift to 4 if the series continues well. I'm interested in the characters enough to overlook the rant.
Edit: The next book, Down Among the Sticks and Bones is really fun. It focuses on one set of characters from this book, making it like a prologue. I'll keep reading the series.
I went into this book expecting something like [b:Epilogue: A Novel|61223679|Epilogue A Novel|Lily Lashley|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1654351499l/61223679.SX50.jpg|96523539], but despite being based on a similar (albeit different) premise, it is quite different. Epilogue is about showing how someone who went to an adult fantasy world, with real risks, politics, and a world similar to "earth but midevil and with magic". Every Heart a Doorway is completely different. The world contained within have substantial fundamental differences from our world, and are much more like fairy tale worlds than traditional fantasy. As such, the characters are not "fully mature people with PTSD in kids bodies", but "kids that had an adventure and were fundamentally changed by being somewhere so far separated from reality, who want nothing more than to go back".
A fast read with an intriguing concept that reverses multiple YA fantasy tropes: It’s a non-magical boarding school for teens who have experienced magic. And it’s not about the adventures they have going through the portal to a fantasy world, but about how they handle the trauma of coming back to the mundane one. The characters are interesting, and I’d like to read more about them, but halfway through it turns into a murder mystery. That gives it a plot, but it comes at the expense of the characterization. (And some of the characters.) It was entertaining, though, and it does make me want to check out the second book.
Ich fand die Idee eines Buches über Kinder, die wie Alice in eine andere Welt verschwinden und nach ihrer Rückkehr Probleme damit haben, sich einzufinden und von ihren Eltern nicht verstanden werden, eigentlich ziemlich originell. Das Buch hat mir auch ganz gut gefallen, allerdings ist es zu kurz, um die Welt vorzustellen, die 6-8 für die Handlung relevanten Personen einzuführen und gleichzeitig eine Mordserie stattfinden zu lassen, die am Ende aufgeklärt ist. Dafür hätte das Buch mindestens doppelt so dick sein müssen. Allerdings hat es mich doch gut genug unterhalten, dass ich Band 2 auf meine Wunschliste gepackt habe.
It was lovely; the main character is asexual, there's a trans character, these things are handled with care and wholesomeness, and the story and writing were poignant.
Violence: Yes (described after-the fact) Sexual Scenes: No
This was very good and discovering Seanan McGuire is one of my highlights of this year.
This is quite a short book, a quick one-sitting read for an adult, but really more of a YA book although with "mature" themes so I'd say teenagers rather than tweens (nothing too racy, but there are dismembered bodies, and vibrator/masturbation jokes).
It's about a boarding school for oddball children - not an unusual premise for a YA book - but in this particular case, the children are those who had been "lost" in various fairylands/alternate worlds, and have now returned to this one and cannot readjust. These are the children who went Through the Looking Glass to Wonderland, or through the wardrobe to Narnia, and so on, and then came back, having lived years in those other worlds, often to find themselves back in young bodies they no longer feel attached to, and with parents who still expect a different person than the one they are now. So the …
This is quite a short book, a quick one-sitting read for an adult, but really more of a YA book although with "mature" themes so I'd say teenagers rather than tweens (nothing too racy, but there are dismembered bodies, and vibrator/masturbation jokes).
It's about a boarding school for oddball children - not an unusual premise for a YA book - but in this particular case, the children are those who had been "lost" in various fairylands/alternate worlds, and have now returned to this one and cannot readjust. These are the children who went Through the Looking Glass to Wonderland, or through the wardrobe to Narnia, and so on, and then came back, having lived years in those other worlds, often to find themselves back in young bodies they no longer feel attached to, and with parents who still expect a different person than the one they are now. So the parents take them to board at this school, and the lady who runs the school tries to help them readjust, and come to terms with their loss (because it's a loss to all of the kids who come here - they all want to go back, and for various reasons, cannot get back).
It's an interesting premise which isn't too unusual on the face of it, but McGuire creates a framework of structure by defining the different types of world (Nonsense worlds and Logic worlds and Wicked worlds and Virtue worlds and variants of each), and also by postulating that the doors appear to the children in the first place to take them into these worlds because of some element that the child needs. A deeply suppressed, quiet child goes to a nonsense world where she can discover and finally express her exuberance for life. An unhappy girl goes to a Logic world where she discovers she is really a he inside - and then is sent to the school by parents who cannot accept this. And so on. It's not really a great leap but codified neatly into a system of alternate worlds that's tied together through this school for wayward children.
And when students start turning up dead shortly after the newest girl Nancy arrives at the school, not only are all the students' lives in danger but so is the future of the school, if word gets out and parents force the school to shut down.
I liked this a good deal more than McGuire's badass-snarky-urban-heroine-in-high-heels books and might consider picking up some of the sequels.
Every Heart a Doorway is cold, strange, dark, beautiful, and deathly. If this is the start I can’t wait to see what the series goes on to be. I loved every second, I have the feeling that I've glimpsed my door, or one close enough that leaving it aches.
The characters are vibrant and unique, and the premise of the worlds gives language to describe the variety in a general way even if we didn't learn every possible combination in this, the first book. It deftly handles what could have been a lot of heavy explanation with just enough to be a guidepost, a scaffold for future books. There’s a great balance between explaining the rules of the world, or at least the guidelines, while offering a taste of the myriad other places future stories might go. I love the plot, the writing, just all of it. The setting evokes …
Rounded up from 2.5.
A truly fantastic concept marred by juvenile character development, non-existent world-building, and a pretty unsurprising reveal.
So the murder mystery was compelling but also not something that I had expected going in and in some ways felt unnecessary to me. I'm just really into this world/worldbuilding and the characters who are all coping with their traumas! The ace rep is A+ and the queer rep in general was great. Wow wow wow do I love this book.
This was an enjoyable read. Not sure if it's YA or horror, or both.
Interesting book about the children who return from portal fantasy worlds and have trouble re-adapting to normal life. A special school is run for them by an adult who is one of them.
Then they have to figure what's going on around the school when people start dying. Each student is so well written to be a distinct individual. Overall it was a great book.
I have one complaint about this book, and perhaps it’s unfair to start a review that way, but here it is: I wish this book had been twice as long as it was. I didn’t get to spend nearly enough time in this world. Good thing this book is the first of an ongoing series.
This book/series shouldn’t necessarily work. It’s based on a trope that seems so well trod at this point, finding a fresh angle is no mean feat. But Seanan McGuire has done it. She took the idea of a special school for special kids (right? how many of those are there at this point?) and did something wonderfully new with it. What if, instead of schools for witches and wizards, for magicians of various sorts, there was a school for kids who, at some point in their childhoods, vanished through magical doorways. You know the sort, …
I have one complaint about this book, and perhaps it’s unfair to start a review that way, but here it is: I wish this book had been twice as long as it was. I didn’t get to spend nearly enough time in this world. Good thing this book is the first of an ongoing series.
This book/series shouldn’t necessarily work. It’s based on a trope that seems so well trod at this point, finding a fresh angle is no mean feat. But Seanan McGuire has done it. She took the idea of a special school for special kids (right? how many of those are there at this point?) and did something wonderfully new with it. What if, instead of schools for witches and wizards, for magicians of various sorts, there was a school for kids who, at some point in their childhoods, vanished through magical doorways. You know the sort, they’re in wardrobes and deep patches of shadow. They’re behind an old appliance in the garage or inside a box in the basement. They’re under the bed or inside just the right gnarled tree. These doorways are everywhere and only just the right children are able to access them, upon which they suddenly find themselves in truly fantastic new worlds.
But here’s the thing, sometimes those kids end up back here – by choice, by force, or by accident – and their experiences in those magical lands have forever altered them, so they don’t fit here anymore – if they ever did. Thank goodness one of those children grew up and founded a school where they can be among the only people who understand what they’ve been through and who also long to rediscover their own magical portals elsewhere – people just like them. Now, having said all that, this concept could still end up feeling trite, but I love how McGuire conceived of such a broad range of possible worlds. There even exists a taxonomy for them that reminds me of D&D character alignment.
This book also does a beautiful job of sharing expressions of queerness in a refreshingly normalizing manner, featuring characters who are asexual, trans, and other queer identities without tokenizing anyone. Even masturbation is normalized, which might seem like an odd thing to mention in a book review, but I was so impressed to encounter mention of self-pleasuring that was meant as neither titillation, joke, or taboo.
TL;DR: It’s not often that I find a new fantasy series that I want to sink my teeth into, but this is one of them. Thank goodness the door to that world is so easy to find.