Book Report- The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern
Erin Morgenstern
Doubleday, 2011
Circus has always been one of my favorite things. If you still could run away with the circus, I would've done so a long, long time ago. So imagine my delight when my next book recommend was for a wonderful new book that was all about doing just that- running away with the circus and never coming back.
The circus serves a darker purpose beyond entertainment and profit. The magicians Prospero the Enchanter and the enigmatic Mr. A.H— groom their young proteges, Celia and Marco, to proxy their rivalry with the exhibits as a stage. Prospero teaches his daughter to hone her innate talents by holding ever larger and more complex magical workings in her mind. Celia takes her position on the game board as the illusionist who makes true transformations, adding tents and maintaining wondrous aspects from the inside. Mr. A.H— trains his orphan ward with books in the ways of glyphs and sympathetic magic and illusory worlds that exist only in the mind of the beholder. Marco takes a position as majordomo to the producer of the circus; he works from the outside in, connected to the circus but not a part of it. The two beguile the circus goers and each other with nightly wonders, soon falling in love despite being magically bound to a deadly competition with rules neither understands; the magical courtship strains the fate laid out for them and endangers the circus that has touched the lives of so many and cannot survive without the talents of both players.
The imagery in this book was absolutely stunning. Set entirely in black and white, each new chapter revealed more and more about the circus, describing it is such great detail that you couldn't help but fall in love with it. The love story of the two magicians crafting the space was just so beautiful, each making more and more beautiful spaces as a gift to the other contender.
One of the characters in the novel had hieroglyphs and spells tattooed all over her body, reminding me of the incredible tattoo artistry of
Thomas Hooper.
3 Act Circus from Sherif Mokbel on Vimeo.
These portraits from Matilda Temperley come as close as I found to the style that I felt in the book. Odd, kind of morose, stark black and white, and very beautiful.
And although these photographs from Ashot Gevrokyan aren't black and white, I had to share them anyway.
And so I have decided that my birthday theme this year will be Night Circus themed. Shall we play this game this weekend friends?