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  • The Midnight Library: A Novel
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Customer reviews

4.3 out of 5 stars
4.3 out of 5
179,838 global ratings
5 star
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4 star
28%
3 star
12%
2 star
3%
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The Midnight Library: A Novel

The Midnight Library: A Novel

byMatt Haig
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Top positive review

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lindaluane
5.0 out of 5 starsLearn to love being you
Reviewed in the United States on October 1, 2020
I really loved this book!
Highly recommended for anyone who might need to learn to appreciate the importance of little things in life and how they are just as important as the big ones - and how we impact the people around us in little ways that make a difference . About learning to love who you are instead of being upset that you are not who others wanted you to be
I try to teach my students that only "they" know the best how to be "them" - this elaborates on that. I love Matt Haig as a writer anyway
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439 people found this helpful

Top critical review

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Patrick F
2.0 out of 5 starsPredictable, Simple, Ultimately Pretty Boring
Reviewed in the United States on October 2, 2020
Disappointingly trite.

I was looking forward to this book. In fact, it’s the first book in years that I actually pre-ordered. The premise is interesting enough: there is an ethereal library that exists between life and death. You are permitted to choose any book from the shelves and each book contains an alternative life. Each life is what would have resulted if you changed a single decision you regretted. Interesting, right? Like you could see what would have happened if you’d gone for that coffee date or pursued that master’s degree or kept playing piano. In the midst of each new life, if the life-hopper finds herself disappointed, she winds up back at the library to try again. Eventually, you’ll either find a life that is the best possible outcome or your “root life” blinks you away into death.

Unfortunately, the premise is played out in the most expected way possible. Nora Seed reverses her regrets and realizes that even the best alternate universes have uncertainties and pain and sadness and disappointment. Even when she winds up with her dream job and a great family, she can’t stay to play this life out. Why? Well, because it isn’t really “hers.” So, surprise, surprise, she ends up waking up from her suicide attempt with a new appreciation for the life she once had and longed to depart.

If you read the first 30-40 pages of this book, you’ll probably be able to write the rest of it in your mind. It’s supposedly an opportunity to explore infinite universes, so why choose the most predictable course of actions? To get across the point that you ought to realize the beauty of the life we have around us? Just write a greeting card to convey the message; an entire book is unnecessary. Additionally, it seems like the author either doesn’t understand or chose not to really explore the idea of infinite options. In all her lives, the most remarkably unique one is granted one sentence of exploration, “In one life she only ate toast” (212). Every other life is just variations on themes of work, friends, romantic partners, and family. Of the infinite possibilities available to explore, nothing unexpected happens. It’s maddening as the author keeps smashing his readers over the head with ideas that anything might happen while never delivering on the promise.

The writing style is difficult to evaluate. It just feels there. Sentence after sentence slowly moving the predictable story forward. It’s utilitarian prose lacking poetry and depth--seemingly at odds with a book that is attempting to spelunk the internal caverns of a deeply depressed person. The author constantly quotes philosophers but doesn’t seem to have any real interest in engaging seriously with philosophical ideas. It’s a novel in form but a cheesy self-help book in content. This novel is a seed of an interesting idea which was never cared for and died below ground. Unfortunate.

D-
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2,391 people found this helpful

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From the United States

Patrick F
2.0 out of 5 stars Predictable, Simple, Ultimately Pretty Boring
Reviewed in the United States on October 2, 2020
Verified Purchase
Disappointingly trite.

I was looking forward to this book. In fact, it’s the first book in years that I actually pre-ordered. The premise is interesting enough: there is an ethereal library that exists between life and death. You are permitted to choose any book from the shelves and each book contains an alternative life. Each life is what would have resulted if you changed a single decision you regretted. Interesting, right? Like you could see what would have happened if you’d gone for that coffee date or pursued that master’s degree or kept playing piano. In the midst of each new life, if the life-hopper finds herself disappointed, she winds up back at the library to try again. Eventually, you’ll either find a life that is the best possible outcome or your “root life” blinks you away into death.

Unfortunately, the premise is played out in the most expected way possible. Nora Seed reverses her regrets and realizes that even the best alternate universes have uncertainties and pain and sadness and disappointment. Even when she winds up with her dream job and a great family, she can’t stay to play this life out. Why? Well, because it isn’t really “hers.” So, surprise, surprise, she ends up waking up from her suicide attempt with a new appreciation for the life she once had and longed to depart.

If you read the first 30-40 pages of this book, you’ll probably be able to write the rest of it in your mind. It’s supposedly an opportunity to explore infinite universes, so why choose the most predictable course of actions? To get across the point that you ought to realize the beauty of the life we have around us? Just write a greeting card to convey the message; an entire book is unnecessary. Additionally, it seems like the author either doesn’t understand or chose not to really explore the idea of infinite options. In all her lives, the most remarkably unique one is granted one sentence of exploration, “In one life she only ate toast” (212). Every other life is just variations on themes of work, friends, romantic partners, and family. Of the infinite possibilities available to explore, nothing unexpected happens. It’s maddening as the author keeps smashing his readers over the head with ideas that anything might happen while never delivering on the promise.

The writing style is difficult to evaluate. It just feels there. Sentence after sentence slowly moving the predictable story forward. It’s utilitarian prose lacking poetry and depth--seemingly at odds with a book that is attempting to spelunk the internal caverns of a deeply depressed person. The author constantly quotes philosophers but doesn’t seem to have any real interest in engaging seriously with philosophical ideas. It’s a novel in form but a cheesy self-help book in content. This novel is a seed of an interesting idea which was never cared for and died below ground. Unfortunate.

D-
2,391 people found this helpful
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Abby Wynne
2.0 out of 5 stars Predictable and preachy but a nice way to spend the time.
Reviewed in the United States on September 13, 2020
Verified Purchase
I think the title says it all. Some interesting ideas but nothing earth shattering for me. A nice novel for when you need to wait for a train.
538 people found this helpful
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jahutcherson
1.0 out of 5 stars Like the main character's life, this book is many things. Unfortunately none of them are great.
Reviewed in the United States on December 9, 2020
Verified Purchase
First things first, this is listed in "Post Apocalyptic SciFi", and while reality itself might fit into that category right now, this book has none of those elements. It is at its core a self-help novel, then chick lit (which I usually have a soft spot for), and then speculative/psuedo-spiritual fiction. Nothing post-apocalyptic or scifi about it at all. Which was disappointing.
As many many other reviewers have said, the book was so very predictable. It was also lacking entirely in conflict. Perhaps it was the author's heavy heavy use of foreshadowing. Perhaps it was the subject and plot. Either way, there's nothing at all exciting, challenging, or novel about the story. It was simply a drawn-out retelling of the Three Ghosts of Relationship Past Present and Future. Ho hum pigs bum.
192 people found this helpful
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Amazon Customer
1.0 out of 5 stars :(
Reviewed in the United States on February 14, 2021
Verified Purchase
This book was simplistic and superficial. It attempted to be much deeper than it was and was written in a choppy way that had no syntax variation. It reads like a first draft and likely was.
As for the story itself, the author made no attempts in being creative. It has likely received good reviews because it is no way challenging to the reader, but still gives a false sense of whimsy and spirituality. The characters lack much needed humanity and the story is void of honesty. Overall, it’s a sad and preachy read, and that’s without touching on it’s disconnected representation of mental health.
69 people found this helpful
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S. Lolar
2.0 out of 5 stars Predictable and insipid
Reviewed in the United States on December 26, 2020
Verified Purchase
I got this book because of all the positive reviews on GoodReads....Never again will I listed to "popular" opinion. This book was insipid except for the obvious saccharine moments. The main character was insufferable--I hated her from the first chapters. It is ridiculous to think that we could all be olympians or rock stars or glacierologists or doctorates if..we just had made a different choice. And it's silly to think you could just be dropped into a life of, say, a glacierologist without absolutely any scientific knowledge and somehow fake your way through said life for a few days. The ending was painfully obvious. I actually skimmed over the last few chapters because it read more like a self-help book...At least it was a quick read (prob because I skimmed over the intolerable parts. LOL)
66 people found this helpful
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Elizabeth Clark
1.0 out of 5 stars Contrived and simplistic
Reviewed in the United States on March 16, 2021
Verified Purchase
I am writing a review in the hopes that Amazon will never again recommend a book like this, at least not to me. Ironically, for a book obsessed with regrets, the best way to avoid regret is to skip this book. It is predictable and relies on hackneyed, ham-fisted writing. It never takes the time to develop its characters so it has to tell the reader everything, including why we should care. It’s moralizing and lecturing and stilted. To the extent anything about the book is subtle, it is the troubling and unnecessary implications that women should sacrifice themselves to save men or that a single unsuccessful suicide attempt will cure depression. But I may be giving the book too much credit. The overarching premise is to live the life you have, or something.

I’m not going into the plot or characters in detail because the author didn’t bother so why should I? What is infuriating about this book, at base, is that there is probably a good book somewhere in it but it is buried under heaps of contrivances and tropes. It reads as though the author was so concerned with writing a “feel good” but “deep” novel that he abandoned storytelling.
100 people found this helpful
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Dollycat
2.0 out of 5 stars big disappointment and let down!
Reviewed in the United States on January 4, 2021
Verified Purchase
Just started reading this book which I got as a Christmas present. I was really looking forward to reading it after seeing such great reviews for this book both on Amazon and on Goodreads. (Still can't understand why it got such high ratings!!) After reading the first few pages I immediately began to get a sinking feeling that this book was not going to be what I was expecting and the more I read it, I see my prediction is going to be right. There really isn't much substance to this novel to warrant all the positive reviews it has gotten. While the premiss of the story is a great concept and idea, the way the author delivers the storyline doesn't give it much substance or poignant messages for the reader to dwell on. I was hoping to get something out of it but it basically is just a very flat story with no creativity involved. For instance, the character of Nora gets the opportunity to experience different lives that she regrets to have never followed through on in her root life. But what is so strange is that while she physically looks and feels different, mentally she is totally not there!! She has no idea who the people are in these lives nor does she have any concept of what her role is. For me, I'm finding it so annoying having to read how lost and confused Nora is every time she enters these new lives. Reading about how she has to ad lib her way through them all without any clue about her surroundings or any idea of how she got to be who she is is getting to be so tedious. It just makes me wonder how is that suppose to give her the opportunity to really feel every nuance of these regretted lives and know if it is better or worse?? In other words, she can't be the person she is in these different lives without some changes to her personality or mental well being if she has changed physically. Who's to say the character of Nora would be OK with the compromises and choices she made in some of these lives?? Especially in the lives where she manages to become so successful!! I guess my biggest regret is that I had hopes that this book would have been similar to Mitch Albom's book The Five People You Meet in Heaven. But it most definitely is NOT. It think it would have been better if Nora would have gotten to watch herself in those lives rather than live in them muddling her way through just being lost and confused. So while I pretty much can predict the outcome of this book and already know where it is heading, I will just continue to "muddle" my way through it to read the disappointing ending before I chuck it to good will.
49 people found this helpful
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Barbara E Slater
1.0 out of 5 stars Overhyped!
Reviewed in the United States on December 31, 2020
Verified Purchase
This book was on every "must read" list but was a total letdown. The plot involves a suicidal woman who time travels and tries out other versions of her life. Since she studied philosophy the book is packed with quotes from philosophers which turns the book into one long existentialist drag. It was a very predictable and unegaging story.
91 people found this helpful
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Timothy HaughTop Contributor: Baby
3.0 out of 5 stars Too Obvious for Me to Enjoy
Reviewed in the United States on November 1, 2020
Verified Purchase
I very much like Mr. Haig’s last novel, How to Stop Time, so it was pretty certain that I was going to read this, which looked to have many of the same qualities of the last one. Unfortunately, I was very disappointed in this.

The idea of “the midnight library”, a place of infinite shelves where all the variations of your lives play out (and an ever-changing book of regrets to guide things) is a great one. When Nora, our disappointed lead character, enters her library and we get a taste of its powers, we look to be on an exciting trip; however, the episodes that follow quickly become statements of the obvious. Nora is on a guided quest to learn a sequence of lessons that offer no real interest or surprises. By the time the end rolls around, any mystery has long since burned away and left an ending we have seen coming for a long while.

Perhaps a was a bit jaded when reading this because it seemed to echo the last novel I read (The Space Between Worlds by Micaiah Johnson) which, though it has problems of its own, I like much better. I also had very high expectations of Mr. Haig, which were unrealized. This is not a book I would come back to or recommend.
50 people found this helpful
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Cathryn Conroy
TOP 500 REVIEWERVINE VOICE
3.0 out of 5 stars Boring, Banal, and Predictable: Don't Waste Your Money or Time on This Book
Reviewed in the United States on February 26, 2021
Verified Purchase
Two succinct ways I viewed this novel by Matt Haig:

1. Underwhelmed
I say that because before I even purchased the book, I knew it had been honored with a slew of "best book" picks from Goodreads to "Good Morning America." Based solely on this, I had certain expectations. They were dashed.

2. Boring, banal, and predictable
The saccharine-sweet story set my teeth on edge.

Nora Seed is 35 years old and desperately unhappy. Living in Bedford, a small town in England about 50 miles from London, she feels like a failure both personally and professionally. She left her fiancé just two days before their wedding, she gave up on competitive swimming when she had Olympic potential, she did finish university with a degree in philosophy, but never managed to translate that into a job she loved—or even just didn't hate. Her brother isn't speaking to her because she quit their rock band. And her beloved cat has died. So Nora decides to die by suicide. When she is in that state between life and death (presumably in a coma), she arrives at the Midnight Library where Mrs. Elm, Nora's school librarian from way back when, is the mistress of this mysterious place. Mrs. Elm informs Nora that she may choose from all these millions of books on the shelves of the Midnight Library to see how her life would have turned out had she made different choices. That is, what if she had gotten married? What if she had pursued swimming and competed in the Olympics? What if she had realized her career dream of becoming a glaciologist? Or that even crazier dream of becoming a rock star? The bulk of the book is Nora coming back to Earth in the guise of these different lives that would have been.

I forced myself to finish it just in case it improved. It didn't. It was mildly amusing at best, boring and banal at worst. Don't waste your money or time on this.
64 people found this helpful
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