From New York Times bestselling author Kate Quinn comes a gorgeously written fantastical adventure which poses the question: Have you ever wished you could live inside a book? Welcome to the Astral Library, where books are not just objects, but doors to new worlds, new lives, and new futures.
Alexandria “Alix” Watson has learned one lesson from her barren childhood in the foster-care system: unlike people, books will never let you down. Working three dead-end jobs to make ends meet and knowing college is a pipe dream, Alix takes nightly refuge in the high-vaulted reading room at the Boston Public Library, escaping into her favorite fantasy novels and dreaming of far-off lands. Until the day she stumbles through a hidden door and meets the Librarian: the ageless, acerbic guardian of a hidden library where the desperate and the lost escape to new lives...inside their favorite books.
The Librarian takes a dazzled Alix under her wing, but before she can escape into the pages of her new life, a shadowy enemy emerges to threaten everyone the Astral Library has ever helped protect. Aided by a dashing costume-shop owner, Alix and the Librarian flee through the Regency drawing rooms of Jane Austen to the back alleys of Sherlock Holmes and the champagne-soaked parties of The Great Gatsby as danger draws inexorably closer. But who does their enemy really wish to destroy—Alix, the Librarian, or the Library itself?
--I use Goodreads to track and rate my current reading. Most of my reads are 4 stars, meaning I enjoyed it hugely and would absolutely recommend. 5 stars is blew-my-socks-off; reserved for rare reads. 3 stars is "enjoyed it, but something fell a bit short." I very rarely rate lower because I DNF books I'm not enjoying, and don't rate books I don't finish.--
Kate Quinn is the New York Times and USA Today bestselling author of historical fiction. A native of southern California, she attended Boston University where she earned a Bachelor’s and Master’s degree in Classical Voice. She has written four novels in the Empress of Rome Saga, and two books in the Italian Renaissance, before turning to the 20th century with “The Alice Network”, “The Huntress,” "The Rose Code," "The Diamond Eye," and "The Briar Club." She is also a co-author in several collaborative novels including "The Phoenix Crown" with Janie Chang and "Ribbons of Scarlet" with Stephanie Dray, Laura Kamoie, Eliza Knight, Sophie Perinot, and Heather Webb. All have been translated into multiple languages. Kate and her husband now live in Maryland with their two rescue dogs.
Update! THE ASTRAL LIBRARY is available for early-read request on Netgalley and Edelweiss. May the odds be ever in your favor...
We finally have a cover for THE ASTRAL LIBRARY, readers--isn't it gorgeous? And I can tell you that there will be a special deluxe limited edition that will knock your socks off: sprayed decorative edges, illustrated endpapers, jacket effects, and even more. These shelf trophies will go fast, so you definitely want to pre-order here: https://www.harpercollins.com/pages/t...
Have you ever wanted to live inside a book? Same. If you’re a fellow bookworm, you know the itch—to step through a portal an author built and wander a world where the prose does the set design, the lighting, the score, even the CGI. Kate Quinn’s latest scratches that itch in the best way. Known for her rich historicals and fierce women’s fiction, she takes a gleeful leap into fantasy—yes, with a dash of dragons—and delivers a story stuffed with Easter eggs, heart, and wonder.
Our heroine is Alexandra “Alix” (Alice) Watson, twenty-six and dealt the most lopsided hand. A childhood shuttled through foster care after her mother vanished to L.A.; college dreams traded for three jobs and mounting debt; a hacked bank account (hello, mysterious Libby); and an eviction that empties her pockets and her hope. Rock bottom sends her to the Boston Public Library—just to breathe. Instead, she finds a hidden door and tumbles into the Astral Library, a labyrinthine sanctuary run by an ageless, gloriously grumpy guardian. Here, readers can enter books—under strict rules: public-domain texts only, no rewriting the canon, and you’re never the story’s “chosen one.” There’s even a wardrobe room that outfits you to the era you’re visiting. Reader, I audibly squealed.
Quinn makes the rules feel delicious, not fussy. The council meetings hum with old-world ritual; the red-card warning system ratchets tension without killing the whimsy. And the portals! Alix sleuths in fog-soaked tunnels with Sherlock Holmes searching for the missing Sarah; rows through Huck-and-Tom swamplands; twirls at a Regency ball where Jane Eyre slips by with a knowing glance. Each chapter bows to the original authors while giving Alix just enough agency to matter. It’s catnip for lit lovers: respectful homage with propulsive stakes.
What surprised me most was the emotional core. Alix’s foster-kid armor, her money panic, the ache of being left behind—these aren’t window dressing. The Astral Library isn’t merely a playground; it’s a refuge for people who need one. As patrons arrive chased by the dangers of their real lives, the novel becomes a tender ode to chosen family and the radical safety of libraries. And when Alix suspects the rot is internal—that someone is hunting not just the patrons but the guardian herself—the book pivots from cozy adventure to clever, high-stakes heist. Saving this refuge will mean breaking a few “unbreakable” rules—and deciding what kind of heroine Alix is allowed to be.
Quinn’s craft sings: clean, vivid sentences; chapter endings that snap; clues tucked like marginalia; and playful dragon shimmer at the edges that teases a bigger mythos without overwhelming newcomers. Pacing-wise, it’s brisk but breathable—set piece, quiet beat, reveal, repeat—so you get both the dopamine of discovery and the exhale of character growth. If you’ve ever underlined Austen, argued with Holmes, or hid in a library on a bad day, this book will feel like being handed a key you’ve wanted your whole life.
Overall: Magnificent. Inventive. Unputdownable. A love letter to libraries, a playground for classic-lit fans, and a smart, emotionally generous adventure that celebrates the readers who call stacks and stories their sanctuary. Five “book-inside-a-book” stars—my early pick for one of the most delightful fantasy releases of 2026.
A very huge thanks to NetGalley and William Morrow for sharing this marvelous fantasy’s digital reviewer copy with me in exchange for my honest thoughts.
I have read almost all of Kate Quinn’s historical fiction novels and loved them! When I heard that she was writing a fantasy novel I was all in - with her imagination I knew I was in for a treat. Just look at that cover and printed edges!
Alix Watson had a rough childhood - her mother left when she was young and she grew up in the foster care system - moving through many homes until she was 18 and finally free.
From the blurb: “Alexandria “Alix” Watson has learned one lesson from her barren childhood in the foster-care system: unlike people, books will never let you down.”
One of Alix’s part time jobs is working in the Boston Public LIbrary. She finds so much comfort as she escapes into her fantasy novels. She enjoys interacting with the patrons and others in the library.
One day a door opens at the top of the stairs - her life will never be the same! She meets the Librarian of the Astral Library and learns how they shelter people who need a place to flee from their troubles or other threats - they can be helped to live inside one of their favorite books!
That is all I will tell you about the plot - it's more fun to discover all the adventures yourself. Alix finds out a lot about herself and how strong she is. She meets great characters from the books that she loves and ultimately helps to keep the library safe from threats!
The plot moves quickly and the writing is bold, imaginative and truly fantastic.
I can recommend this book to everyone - if you are reading this review you are one of us – a bibliophile and lover of all things book related. You are in for a treat.
I received an ARC of this novel from the publisher through Edelweiss. It was my pleasure to read and review this novel!
Have you ever wanted to live inside a book? Oh boy, I have. Eight year old Alix Watson ponders this as she enters her third foster home in six months, clutching her treasured copy of The Voyage of the Dawn Treader. This home is not up to much either, so it’s pretty obvious to her that it’s inevitable she would want to escape into those pages and inhabit them. As a 26-year-old holding down three jobs, she does poverty maths at a grocery store and her card is declined. Sadly, things are only going to get worse for her. She heads to the Boston Public Library, which is one of her part-time jobs, but which is also her place of comfort and solitude. In order to avoid the officious security guard and head librarian Elizabeth, she steps into the Reading Room storage closet and enters… The Astral Library, with its ageless guardian of this magical space. The Astral Library chose her, there’s a first time for everything. However, something dark is lurking in its shadows threatening to destroy the library. Alix must find hidden strengths and considerable resourcefulness to vanquish this determined enemy.
First of all, the Boston Public Library sounds truly wonderful and would there were an astral library to escape into. This is Kate Quinn‘s first voyage into fantasy fiction and for me it’s a success but then I guess she’s speaking to someone who has been bookworm from the age of about five.
As you would expect this novel is so well written, it’s vivid, lively, engaging, pacey, clever, witty and funny. It’s such an imaginative and creative way of making a stand against library closures, book bans and so on. Readers leap from one book world to the next. From 221B Baker Street to Jane Austin‘s world, via Tom Sawyer, Dickens and the Three Musketeers and many more. It’s a brilliant allegory for outside attacks pulling characters inside books to the safety of its pages.
The characters are excellent. I love the whip smart repartee of Alix with an i (with many wry smiles from me) usually as a cover-up of the awful hand life, or more accurately her mother, has bequeathed her and as a result of her poverty. She grows and grows as time goes on alongside my admiration. The Astral Librarian is fabulous, Elizabeth less so and the pages are especially lively when Alix’s friend Beau Sato-Jones inhabits the pages. He’s such a colourful contrast to Alex although she does change from monotone to technicolour.
Overall, as someone who has long lived in the pages of books this strikes a chord. It drives home pertinent points in a smart and insightful way and I revel in the worlds this talented author transports me to.
With thanks to NetGalley and especially to HarperCollins, HarperFiction for the much appreciated early copy in return for an honest review.
If you love books, you will LOVE this book! This book is the fantasy of every book lover out there. A chance to go to a magical library where you can spend time in your favorite books.
Alix was abandoned by her mother and raised in the foster care system. Now in her twenties, she works several dead end jobs and is about to be homeless. Her identity has been stolen and she has nowhere to turn to. Feeling hopeless she takes refuge at the Boston Public library when a door opens for her and she finds herself in the Astral Library. She meets the Librarian who offers to take her into any book she wants to live for as long as she wants. This is a dream come true for Alix but before she can decide where to go, danger comes for other patrons of the Astral Library. Alix decides she wants to help and becomes entangled in an attack on the library. Alix must help the Librarian save the library before this magical place can be destroyed.
There were so many elements to this book and so much that I enjoyed. First of all let me say that I am a huge fan of Kate Quinn's books. I have read everything she ever read so I loved when she made a reference to one of her past novels. I also adored all of the references to books and other authors. The fact that reading this book turned me on to some other novels is such an amazing feat. What I loved best though was the action and how strong Alix was. I did tear up at one part. When a book can make you feel true emotion you know you have a winner. I cannot recommend this book enough and think anyone who is a book lover will adore this book!!!
Thank you to William Morrow Publishing and NetGalley for this ARC.
Author Kate Quinn definitely knows how to navigate between the mundane and the marvelous; for a first foray into magical realism, this story is wonderful!
Quinn’s novel is built around the question: Have you ever wanted to live inside a book?
She’s created The Astral Library, where invitations are given as a sanctuary to book lovers who are desperate and need to escape into a new life. I was captivated by this intriguing premise, fully invested in a well-plotted story with great characters (Alexandria ‘Alix’ Watson and Beau Sato-Jones), and motivated by intriguing mysteries (Who is Libby Bibb? What happened to Alix’s mom?). Quinn excels at drawing her readers into the setting, and this one is no exception.
My highlighter was working overtime, marking fantastic quotable lines. I learned new vocabulary and realized that there’s a responsibility in letting magic into our lives. I smiled at the warning not to ‘invoke the Shush’ and the characters’ definition of ghosts. I will admit to being weary of spending too much time in The Astral Library, wishing it had been a more balanced book with less magical realism - just a personal preference.
Quinn is a masterful writer. You won’t be disappointed. Come slip between the pages of a captivating book!
I was gifted this copy and was under no obligation to provide a review.
If you have read Kate Quinn's previous novels, this one is just a bit different as it's more magical realism and fun fantasy. Alexandra "Alix" Watson grew up in the foster care system after her mother abandoned her to follow a boyfriend to L.A. She is now twenty-six and finds herself doing poverty math, where she is financially struggling to make ends meet with $36.82 in her bank account. She receives a notice that her future paychecks will go to Libby Bibb and her roommate asks her to find another place to live. Her safe space is the Boston Public Library, so she heads there to escape and she finds a hidden door and stumbles into the Astral Library. The Astral Library offers sanctuary to people who have nowhere left to go but between the pages. When she steps into the library the books come alive and the patrons decide which public domain book they step into. Kate Quinn pays tribute to her favorite fantasy authors as well favorite classic novels as the patrons move from book to book. Alix encounters deception and the Astral Library is threatened. She has to save the library with the help of her friends.
Many thanks to NetGalley and William Morrow for the ARC. Publication Date : 2/17/26 Categories: Women's Fiction, Sci Fi & Fantasy, General Fiction (Adult)
We get it. Nobody likes book bans. Kate Quinn doesn't either.
*The Astral Library* imagines a world where broken people, the ones who rely on libraries when no one else will accept them, are transported into their favorite stories. We leap into Jane Austen’s *Pride and Prejudice*, wander through the world of Sherlock Holmes, and explore other literary classics. It’s a premise full of potential.
Unfortunately, instead of letting the magic unfold naturally, Astral Library leans heavily on telling rather than showing. We're repeatedly reminded how the downfall of uptight people who don’t read is somehow dictating what others are allowed to read, a message that quickly becomes more lecture than narrative.
“Are you one of those book burners who wants to ban every book they don’t like, all to *save the children*? One of those people who thinks libraries are corrupting our national moral fiber?” Kate Quinn knows exactly what she’s doing here.
Our main character, Alix, abandoned and raised in foster care, finds others with similarly painful pasts: abused wives, neglected kids, and lost souls all seeking refuge. Together, they fight to save one of society’s last truly democratic institutions, the free public library.
Astral Library relies too heavily on government disputes as the antagonist, while the ability to jump into books gets taken by the wayside.
“Public institutions have to remain controversy free, Alix.”
There’s something beautiful buried in here, but the agenda keeps overshadowing the magical realism. Instead of being immersed in a story, you’re constantly being reminded what you’re supposed to think.
Oh, and yes, Florida gets a special mention too:
“The great cesspool into which all loungers and idlers are irresistibly drained,” said the Librarian, coming to a halt at the nearest corner. “Florida?” I guessed.
I wanted to love this. I really did. But in the end, the message outweighed the magic.
The premise of this book was absolutely irresistible to a lifelong book-lover like me. A magical library that invites you to spend a year inside any story as a supporting character? Sign me up! I was sympathizing with Kate Quinn's down-on-her-luck protagonist from Page 1: Her voice was fantastically relatable, grabbed me from the start, and didn't let go. Having read Kate Quinn's other historical page-turners, I wasn't expecting the story to take such a turn into higher fantasy -- librarian dragons, anyone? -- but even though that isn't my usual genre, I thoroughly enjoyed this read and highly recommend it to anyone looking for something a little different and a whole lot of fun.
This is her First with Magical Realism. Life is Set Inside a Library. Sounds So Good.
Beautiful Cover 💙
Coming February 17, 2026
Definitely, Looking Out For This One! Please Give Me an Early Copy. I will of Course Buy the Book if I can See Kate on Tour! I want to so very bad. 🩵
Since her next book, The Woman on the Mountain, which obviously sounds Fantastic, isn’t publishing until 2027, I can’t access it here, so just thought I’d mention.
Kate Quinn is Collaborating again with Jamie Chang and that book is Coming Out in 2028. She is a Busy Woman. Don’t Want her Overdoing it since want her to always be ok, but she is Incredible and will read all these Books. 📚
Hands down all the stars, I absolutely would sale my soul to live in this book! A woman gets invited into a mysterious library and is offered sanctuary. She is able to pick any public domain book to live in for awhile if she wants to. Do I need to say anymore? What an opportunity. I can't for the life of me decide on what my book would be. I'm too mean to live in Little Women but what fun it would be to know the March sisters... Anyway all kinds of adventures happen in this book as the library is attacked before she can enter her book. So magical things are not my jam usually but this is just done so well I couldn't help but to devour it! Did I also mention our main girl is plus size? Yes ma'am she is and she rides dragons, dresses well, has a tiny nip of romance, and she is amazing. Can I say I'm 40 and representation absolutely matters! What I wouldn't have give to read about a plus size heroine at age 16 when everyone was supposed to look like Paris Hilton. Would have meant the world to me.
This newest from Kate Quinn is unlike anything she's written before! It's unforgettable, completely FANTASTICAL and utterly timely. The book follows a struggling young former foster kid, Alix, who is completely down on her luck and finds herself whisked off into the magical realm of the Astral Library where lost souls can find refuge from their real lives in fictional books.
Full of adventure, snark, passion for books and an indomitable love for libraries, this book will have you cheering, crying and rooting for the underdog and was an ABSOLUTE delight to read. I sped through these pages so fast and was DEVASTATED to see it come to an end. Book dragons real and fictional will DEVOUR this and be left wanting more.
Many thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for an early digital copy in exchange for my honest review. I couldn't flip the pages of this book fast enough and am eternally grateful for Kate Quinn's wonderful imagination. This is the perfect love letter for bibliophiles the world over and fans of stories like The ten thousand doors of January.
Prior to this book, I'd only read one book of Kate Quinn's before, her most recent title, "The Briar Club," which I liked. I've only known this author to be primarily a historical fiction writer, so it was interesting to see her delve into magical realism. In any case, a book about books is always going to capture my interest, and a book where people get to live INSIDE books? GOAL! I know a lot of my fellow book peeps and fellow librarians will love this book.
Many thanks to NetGalley, the author, and the publisher for a pre-publication digital ARC of this book in exchange for my honest opinions.
“The Astral Library” by Kate Quinn is a fantasy adventure that highlights the importance of libraries, librarian's and books. It is also a social commentary on the state of budget cuts and censorship that Libraries are facing today. The story revolves around a young woman who hasn’t had an easy life, her mother abandoned her when she was 8, and she has been shuffled through the foster care system ever since. She is alone, distraught, and seeks refuge in the Boston Public Library because books have been her only friend. While there, she walks through a door into the Astral Library where she finds she can create a new life for herself by jumping into one of the world greatest story’s. As an avid reader, I have always had the thought that escaping into the world of one on my most treasured books would be a way to remove myself from life’s difficulties so the premise really intrigued me. While the book turned out to be too much of a fairy tale for me, I do think it will have great appeal to fantasy and magical realism readers. I also think it would be great book for the YA market as the message within the story is an important one.
Thank you NetGalley and William Morrow for the ARC in exchange for my honest review.
I received an ARC from NetGalley in exchange for a honest review.
“Have you ever wished you could live inside a book?”
The Astral Library was a very creative story with a lot of books' references, but it didn't fully live up to my expectations. The first half intrigued me and I was curious to see where the story would go. Alas, it became a bit repetitive after a while, with the characters jumping/traveling from one book to another for plot's reasons. I wish instead we had explored the literary worlds a little more. Plus, I also expected the story to go in a certain way (but it didn't) and the shadowy enemy was a letdown.
All in all, it was a good story with book worlds and quotes, but it could've been better with some changes and different choices.
I was lucky enough to read a paperback copy when I saw the author I immediately jumped at the chance. I did not realize thst this was a fantasy book. I enjoyed this book because so many classics were mentioned and I have a classic group on Facebook Bernadette's Classic Book Chat Lounge. I do prefer her historical fiction books so much better.
Thank you to Harper Collins for gifting me a free digital ARC through NetGalley. When I saw Kate Quinn’s name and the title, Astral Library, I clicked wish for it immediately. She is my favorite historical fiction author. This is completely unlike all of her other books I have read. It is a new twist for her- fantasy- with a lot of allegorical elements that are incredibly timely to our current societal issues surrounding books. Read it! It not only reminds the reader of why we read, what we read, and how we read, but also that everyone comes to a story with their own journey. Honestly, it started out like a normal fiction read, then shifts to an Alice in wonderland dreamworld, transformed into Sherlocks Holmes mystery, then a bit Fahrenheit 451 dystopian vibes, and ends with… you have to read it to find out! As a fellow book dragon and librarian of my classroom, I adored this book and its reminder of how important libraries are to communities and its individuals. And that when we are overwhelmed with life, jump into a book to escape its hardships where time stands still.
Thank you to William Morrow for having sent me a #gifted ARC Copy of The Astral Library. This one was a fun adventure and a very unique story. And of course if you are book lover and fantasy reader then this one I definitely think will be a great choice! I did like the use of other classic books being mentioned in this book as well for what the Main character Alix enjoyed reading. I will say the book started off really strong but at about halfway through I started to get a bit bored and was slowly losing my interest. I still think many will enjoy this one no doubt about it but I still did enjoy it don't get me wrong! I am a huge fantasy reader so being able to go to a "magical" type of library like the Astral Library would be super cool and a way to escape reality and possibly start a whole new life!
I got an advanced copy of this book thanks to NetGalley. I have read many of Quinn's historical fiction books, so it was a bit different reading a fantasy book by this author. It was great fun diving into many different book worlds with Alix, though I personally had a hard time connecting to the characters in this book.
The Astral Library by Kate Quinn is the ultimate book about books. Patrons of the Astral Library get to LIVE inside the books! It is a dream come true for anyone who grew up watching Beauty and the Beast and wishing she had Belle's library, complete with smoothly rolling ladders.
I've read all of Kate Quinn's twentieth century historical fiction novels, and loved them all. The Astral Library is very different from those, but still has Kate's signature gorgeous and immersive writing, and quick wit.
Alix, an alumna of the foster care system, is busting her ass working three jobs to try to make ends meet, and it is just not working. Trying to scrimp and save to survive, she still keeps getting the maddening "card declined" message whenever she tries to make a simple purchase, like very frugal groceries. What Alix desperately needs is a break from her bleak reality. Fortunately, The Astral Library is there to provide just that. Accessible from any library in the world, Alix finds a portal to the magic library in the reading room of the Boston Public Library.
The Astral Library is just the whimsical, imaginative, escape from reality that I needed. It's so refreshing and rejuvinating to visit a world in which inanimate objects become sentient, people can escape their harsh realities in any book that's in public domain, and the Librarian's "HUSH" has supernatural power. They just have to foil the nefarious plans of the Library Board, who is choosing to use their power for evil rather than good.
I highly recommend this book to anyone who loves to escape to the world of a great story.
Thank you to William Morrow for providing a complimentary Advanced Reader Copy through NetGalley. All opinions are my own.
“Have you ever wanted to live inside a book?” This is the question Quinn opens her latest novel (a huge departure from her usual fare) with, introducing readers to 26-year-old Alix. Alix’s life is in shambles: in one day, she’s been fired from one of her several jobs, evicted from her apartment, and her bank account—which only has $36.82 in it—has been frozen. Ever since her mother abandoned her at age 8, Alix has found refuge from her dismal string of foster homes in libraries, but she doesn’t think even the joys of the Boston Public Library’s Reading Room can cheer her up this time. Until (a la Lucy’s entrance to Narnia) she stumbles through a door into the Astral Library, which is accessible from any library to those needing sanctuary. Here she encounters books that literally rustle with life, ghosts that linger to finish their TBR lists, and the most unforgettable Librarian ever. The Librarian offers Alix the opportunity to visit any book she wants (well, there are some restrictions), but before Alix can step into the book world of her choosing, she needs to dress the part. She quickly steps out of the Library to visit her friend Beau, who has a dress shop, for the right costume. Finally ready, Alix is preparing to enter her book, when the Astral Library comes under attack and the Librarian departs to defend it. Impulsively, Alix tags along, and the escapade begins. This is an amazing read! Alix is relatable and grows into a feisty heroine. The Library is creative genius. The Librarian is the most incredible badass dragon lady, fiercely protective of her patrons and able to shush like nobody’s business. If you’re a fan of Kate Quinn, you should read it. If you like fantasy and adventure, read it. If you like books about books and libraries, read it. Thanks to NetGalley for the arc!
Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for an early copy in exchange for an honest review.
Review: If you’re a fan of the authors historical fiction and wondered what would happen if she wrote a cozy fantasy with your favorite classics as characters, this book is for you. For the most part I enjoyed this. I haven’t read a lot of the classics mentioned but was still able to follow the story. The MC is hilarious and is very relatable: rough around the edges. This is a very thoughtful story and really leans into the ways in which books save us from our own lives. The story is touching and creative. The latter half felt more like a hallmark movie so if that’s your thing, even more to the point of picking it up. I preferred the first half of the story but all in all this was a good read.
What a pure treat this book was. Kate Quinn normally writes historical fiction, but in this one, she delved a bit into the fantasy genre.
When Alix (spelled with an i) finds herself down on her luck, working 3 jobs just to make ends meet and only $36.82 in her bank account, she finds herself at the Boston Public Library where she feels the safest. As she strolls through the Reading Section, she finds herself in an amazing room that she comes to realize is the Astral Library...a magical place that only the "chosen" can enter, where you can go and live in any book of your choosing. Because who wouldn't want to live in a book?!? And just as she is ready to escape into her book, the Astral Library & its Librarian (with a capital L) are ambushed and come under attack. Alix decides to help the Librarian figure out what is going on. We are taken on an adventure through some of the classics and even through paintings and the gaming world just to figure out what is going on. It seems that the Library Board is trying to make some changes that the Librarian thinks are absurd. When the Librarian becomes injured, it is Alix's job to help protect the Astral Library.
This book is a tribute to libraries and what they are meant to be...a sanctuary to booklovers in need, who are desperate and have nowhere else to go but between the pages of a book. Libraries are not a "business" to be monetized and modernized (believing that a library should only be one-quarter books). We book lovers need to stick together and protect our local libraries.
Many thanks to NetGalley & William Morrow Publishing for the opportunity to read an advanced eARC of this book in exchange for my honest opinions.
I would say Quinn’s departure from historical fiction to magical realism is a huge success. The Astral Library is a celebration of books, readers, libraries and librarians. We’ve all wished to escape into a book at one time or another, and that’s exactly what Alix Watson gets to do.
Alix is poor, recently homeless, and just lost her job. She loves to seek solace in the Boston Public Library, and on one very bad day, she does just that. She somehow stumbles upon a portal that takes her to the magical Astral Library, where she can choose a book in which to live. This is where the adventures begin.
I don’t usually like magical realism, but since I’ve always loved Quinn’s writing, this one deserved to be read. It is both whimsical and emotional, and a trip into the world of imagination. I loved it. It is creative and mystical. Thank you, NetGalley and William Morrow for the eARC.
Book lovers who have favorite books they visit again and again and wish they could live there will love this book. The wonderful Astral Library, the literary references, the adventures all make this book a delight. In today’s atmosphere of book banning and budget cuts, it is also an important book. Alix is a true heroine fighting the good fight to keep all books available and all libraries open to meet the myriad needs of everyone in society. Bravo to Kate Quinn who writes wonderful historical fiction, but can also write a great book of magical realism.
I’m such a fan of Kate Quinn that I couldn’t wait to start reading this the minute I was approved. This was so different from any other novels I’ve read by her and I was impressed by its imaginative premise. Wouldn’t popping into your favorite book to live alongside beloved characters be amazing?
The protagonist is very relatable and there is an abundance of literary references that will bring joy to any bookworm. I will say the chapters were pretty long and I would’ve enjoyed more time in books and less inside the library itself. But this mashup of magical realism and fantasy was a delightful change from Quinn’s norm. A fantastical story that sucked me in so quickly that it felt like I blinked and two hours had gone by without even realizing. I’m very glad Quinn decided to try her hand at a different genre, I really enjoyed this fantastical story!