4.0 ★— This book’s been my steady companion these last few days in the colder stretch of late fall, and I had a good time with it!
It centers on Cassandra Fairfax, former bookseller turned book thief, who’s surviving in a world where bookshops and their books harbour ancient magic. When she returns to the shop she once abandoned for her life of crime, she finds her former mentor and boss dead and herself the sudden owner of it.
The story is definitely one I wouldn’t have enjoyed as much if I’d read it, because it felt like it moved quite slowly, and the things I usually like about slower-paced magical realism books were lacking here. Namely, I kind of wish the bookshop aspect and the running of the shop had been more integral. Cassandra gets saddled with the bookshop at the beginning, when it’s in bad shape, cluttered and messy, so I wish her actually cleaning up and getting it truly up and running again had been given a stronger focus.
I just would have loved to get more of that cozy, atmospheric sense of the magical bookshop. Some of the general day-to-day details and the setting felt underutilized, which might have been due to the book’s larger mystery plot.
Because of Cassandra’s identity as a thief, and the aforementioned mystery aspect involving her mentor’s death and the bookshop itself, much of the story dealt with grittier, darker themes. Some of that I liked, since the secondary characters were sort of interesting at the start, but as the story went on, their inclusion didn’t always feel worth it. They weren’t quite interesting, wacky, or fun enough to carry their parts of the story. I would have rather the book left out their POV chapters in favour of focusing instead on Cassandra, who was a more compelling, morally grey figure — a woman with a conflicted past you don’t often see in slower-paced books like this!
Her romance with Lowell, a rival bookseller, which began with them on opposing sides and disliking each other heavily, was one of the shining beacons of this book. I really enjoyed how thoroughly grumpy and starchy he was at the start, and how their relationship only slowly thawed. Again, if this book had given me greater focus on Cassandra and, by extension, some everyday (or domestic) shenanigans, I think I could have appreciated it even more!
The magical aspects were fun here, but we really barely went in depth with them, and I wished we’d had a deeper exploration of this world and its mechanisms. If the book hadn’t half-baked the bookshop and magical elements in favor of the mystery plot, it could have been stronger and a more balanced reading experience overall.
But as an audiobook to entertain without requiring a lot of complicated world-building, for a cozy fall or early winter vibe, this definitely works super well, and I had a great time listening to it through that lens!
🎧 Audiobook Note
🎙️ Narration Style: Solo
The audiobook’s narrator was lovely and enhanced my enjoyment of the story by a lot! It was calming and fun to listen to, and the tenor she took on for Lowell was a particular favorite of mine.
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Thank you to NetGalley and Hachette Audio for the ALC in exchange for my review.