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Mirrorscape

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Prepare to enter the Mirrorscape–a world where the bizarre is commonplace and logic makes no sense.

Melkin Womper is thrilled to escape his dull future as a village weaver and develop his artistic talent when he’s apprenticed to Ambrosius Blenk, one of Vlam’s most famous masters. Mel is especially excited by the colors that he’ll be able to use, since color is a very expensive Pleasure, strictly controlled by the sinister Fifth Mystery.

Mel can’t wait to enjoy the wonders of the grand city and begin his important work for Blenk. Instead, his dreams are quickly crushed by the reality of days filled with unimportant tasks and bullying by the other apprentices whose wealthy families have purchased their positions. Still, the promise of working under the great Blenk and studying his legendary paintings makes the misery bearable.

But when Mel and his new friends, Ludo and Wren, inadvertently stumble into a battle between the Fifth Mystery and the Rainbow Rebellion, an underground band fighting to make Pleasures affordable for all, the trio must step through Blenk’s paintings into the Mirrorscape. In this alternative world, the friends encounter monsters, mazes, talking houses, angels, and more.

Hugely original and deeply compelling, Mirrorscape is a thrilling adventure filled with the beautiful and the bizarre, the fantastical and the frightening, and entry into an incredibly visual, secret world, where the ultimate weapons are pigment, a paintbrush, and the power of imagination.

352 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2007

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About the author

Mike Wilks

21 books18 followers
Mike Wilks (British, b. 1947) began his artistic career at age thirteen when he won a scholarship to art school. He ran a successful graphic design business for five years before he sold it and began writing and illustrating books in 1975. He rocketed to fame following publication of The Ultimate Alphabet in 1986; the puzzle book sold 750,000 copies worldwide. After eight illustrated books, he established himself as a novelist with The Mirrorscape Trilogy, a fantasy adventure series.

The Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, and many private collections have acquired Wilks’s drawings and paintings. Wilks lives in London.

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5 stars
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241 (33%)
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 113 reviews
Profile Image for Julie.
240 reviews53 followers
December 27, 2009
I love the premise (traveling into the worlds of paintings), I love the cover, I just don't love the book. It's missing something that I can't put my finger on. Sigh.
Profile Image for Roof Beam Reader (Adam).
579 reviews3 followers
July 29, 2010
Mirrorscape by Mike Wilks
Final Verdict: 2.0 out of 4.0

Plot/Story:
2 - Plot/Story could work with better development.

Mike Wilks’ Mirrorscape is a young-adult fantasy novel with a promising premise: what would the world be like if artists could actually travel into their paintings? The imagination roars with the idea and, I for one, was drawn in just by the possibilities; sadly, the execution leaves much to be desired. While much leeway can and should be given, as fantasy worlds are imaginary and, to a degree, largely impossible, the world of Mirrorscape is so passively developed that one has to really try to believe in it. There is no ease or enrapture. The problem also exists on two levels: 1) the “real” world which Wilks develops is meant to resemble Earth; however, the villages, towns, political systems, etc. are so weakly and off-handedly described, that the reader is left having to guess about what these places might really be like, how people might really interact – because the author does not show us. 2) the “fantasy” world inside the paintings is so fantastical – the energy is ramped up and progresses at a nearly whiplash pace. This is a world in which absolutely anything can happen - and it does. It is almost as if Wilks sat down for days on end, imagining everything he possibly could, and then cramming it into sentence after sentence of this book. But, where is the plot development? Where is the natural story progression? The wild, “anything goes” attitude of the mirrorscape is so at odds with the underdeveloped, under-described natural world, it was impossible to reconcile the two into one co-existing world. With a softer hand, I think, the story could have worked. If Wilks had slowed down a bit, eased up on the creative throttle and allowed the places and the characters to grow and enchant us, rather than bombard us, a truly magical story could have ensued – but it did not. Perhaps the raging energy and non-stop action would be better suited to the movie format.

Characterization:
2 – Characters slightly developed.

While the plot was a slight disappointment, the characters were heartbreakingly underdeveloped. Wilks provides very little history or motivation for his characters; they interact in the most superficial ways with one another, yet the reader is meant to believe that, somehow (in a matter of days, really) these deep friendships and deeper animosities manage to develop – so that good and evil comes to fight a battle to end all battles at the climax of the novel, and yet, the reader couldn’t really care less who prevails or who falls along the way. It is also disappointing that every character remains flat and static. The characters we meet in the beginning who are “bad” remain bad through to the end. The characters who are “good” are, of course, the “heroes” of the novel. Wilks attempts to throw a curveball in the character of Dirk Tot, the eminent artist’s right-hand man, but it fails disastrously (where there could have been potential) because the sub-story goes absolutely nowhere. When Mel, our main character, reveals his misgivings about Tot to the master artists, they can only laugh and the reader is unable to do anything but laugh at the absurdity of the whole scene.

Read the entire review at: http://RoofBeamReader.blogspot.com
Profile Image for Kira.
51 reviews
January 4, 2023
1,5 Sterne.
1 Stern für das Potenzial des Buches, ein halber für das wunder-wunderschöne Cover.

Ja, wo fange ich hier nur an? Mir wurde das Buch zu Weihnachten geschenkt und ich wollte es möglichst schnell lesen, weil sich die Grundidee - das Reisen durch gemalte Bilder - super cool angehört hat. Auch das Worldbuilding an sich (z.B. fünf Gilden, die je für einen Sinn standen und über alles verfügen, was mit diesen Sinnen zu tun hat (z.B. Sehsinn = Farbe, Geschmackssinn = Essen)) fand ich super!
Leider hört es dann mit meinem Lob auch so ziemlich auf. Man kann auf jeden Fall sagen, dass man merkt, dass der Autor selbst Künstler ist, denn kreativ ist das Buch allemal. Die Geschichte in Mirrorscape selbst ist nämlich ein absoluter Fiebertraum. Es wird so viel verrücktes Zeug beschrieben, dass mein Gehirn irgendwann aufgegeben hat, sich das alles vorzustellen. Ich habe beim Lesen das Gefühl gehabt, dass der Autor um jeden Preis möglichst viele Ideen bzgl. Wesen in das Buch stopfen wollte, es am Ende aber einfach viel zu viel war, um einen Durchblick zu behalten.
Eine stressige Kampfszene folgt der nächsten. So viel, dass ich irgendwann, gerade gegen Ende, angefangen habe, quer zu lesen, weil ich nur noch wissen wollte wie es ausgeht. In der Mitte geht es plötzlich nur noch über Insekten (Was war da los??) und für ein Jugendbuch geht es irgendwie erschreckend oft um Tod und Mord.
Vielleicht liegt es auch viel an der Übersetzung von manchen Namen (Dirk Tot, Mampfi für ein Monster, das Regenbogenmaden frisst), aber ich bin nie ganz mit dem Schreibstil warm geworden.
Fantasy ist das Genre allemal. Wir haben einen Jungen, der von zuhause weggeht, um Künstler zu werden und in seiner neuen Lehre erst einmal für seine Herkunft gemobbt wird. Soweit, so bekannt. Es ist ja objektiv auch nicht direkt schlecht. Aber warum sind die Charaktere so platt? Der Mobber ist in seinen jungen Jahren alkoholabhängig, der beste Freund des Protagonisten verrät ihn (vollkommen offensichtlich, aber es ist ja auch ein Buch für Jugendliche, hier hat es keinen Sinn das zu kritisieren) und die "Bösen" stellen sich herrlich blöd an.
Das Buch schafft es, gleichzeitig total viele Klischees zu erfüllen und originell zu sein. Trotzdem ist es irgendwie ... schlecht.
Das Ende war mir persönlich viel zu glatt, aber auch hier: Jugendbuch, das ist schon okay so.
Einige lustige Stellen gab es auf jeden Fall (Ein Haus, das Heimrich hieß und so ziemlich alles gehasst hat oder ein Dämon-Butler mit Putzzwang), aber alles in allem habe ich mich vor allem am Ende nur noch gequält.
Ich habe die ganze Zeit auf einen Twist gewartet, der schlichtweg nie stattgefunden hat.
Echt schade, das Buch hatte so viel Potenzial, meine Interessen und Erwartungen zu erfüllen, ist dem leider aber überhaupt nicht gerecht geworden.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Janeen-san .
265 reviews
May 4, 2011
This book was AMAZING! I loved it! This is one of the books that I judged by its cover only; I've never even read the back cover and I'm glad I didn't: I just let the story draw me in.
The prologue instantly hooked me, drawing me into the story with its first wonderful paragraph:
It should have been darker than the darkest night, as black as Indian ink. But it was not. He held his hand in front of his face and could clearly distinguish its outline in the feeble light. It was both a blessing and a curse. If he could see, then he could also be seen.
This opening paragraph brought forth a feeling excitement and raised questions within me. I felt immensely compelled to read on!
The story progresses in short, imagine-filled chapters, filled with many characters, most of them with extremely cool names, such as Adolphus Spute, Ambrosius Blenk, Dirk Tot, the Rainbow Rebellion, and my favorite, Mumchance. Mike Wilks, the author, must have had a great time inventing theses names.
I really, really liked the concept of this book; it was great and took my imagination on a roller-coaster ride of whopping proportions. Shifty traders in the marketplace would fool their customers, giving them flour that was almost all sawdust and watered wine. People everywhere were getting tricked for paying lots of money for worthless items, and who was behind it all? A group of wickedly twisted shopkeepers. In the words of the character Dirk Tot, "There will always be men who only think in terms of profit, never in terms of value." To put a stop to all these wrong-doings in the marketplace, the honest merchants of the city of Nem got together and formed something called the Mysteries. I really liked this part. Anyway, they formed the Mysteries. The items a merchant would be trading would be carefully inspected by whichever Mystery the merchant was a member of. The shady shopkeepers and merchants soon all disappeared and everything went well for a while. But--and there is always a but--the system that was made to stop corruption...soon became corrupted itself.
And this is where the character with great artistic talent, Melkin Womper, comes in: he is born into a world with corrupt Mysteries, although he knows close to nothing of it because he lives in the country. But that quickly changes when he encounters a vile man, Adolphus Spute, and his whistle-tooting companion, Mumchance. They are part of the Fifth Mystery, the most-corrupt one out of the five, and they're convinced that Mel has stolen a Pleasure. The character, Mel, and the reader are left to figure out what 'Pleasures' are, and it is soon revealed. The five Mysteries are based on the five senses, but since they became corrupt, the idea of Pleasures were introduced. If a baker, being a member of the Mystery in charge of taste, wanted to bake a new kind of cake with chocolate icing, he would first need to save up enough money to buy that particular Pleasure. The concept of Pleasures within the five Mysteries became tyrannical and everyone was kept horribly poor. Almost no one could afford new Pleasures.
The man called Spute is convinced that Mel has stolen a Pleasure belonging to the Fifth Mystery, which has to do with sight, and therefor, art. And Mel a young artist, and by pinning some drawings up on his wall, he unwittingly stole a Pleasure: and Spute wants it back.
Dirk Tot, a friend of Mel's friend, whisks Mel away from the danger in the nick of time, and they travel to the great city of Vlam, where Mel gets an apprenticeship to a great artist, Ambrosius Blenk. There, he meets the rude, nasty Head Apprentice named Groot (another great name) and another apprentice named Ludo. Ludo and Mel become friends, and then a kitchen-girl named Wren joins them.
And together they unravel the mystery of the Mirroscape.
Let me repeat my earlier claim: this book is amazing. Here's why.
Mike Wilks had invented a wonderful concept of an art academy...with paintings...that let you enter a whole new world. The artist's world. That's right! Certain paintings have something called the Mirrormark, a symbol that will open the portal into the world of the painting! I instantly loved the idea. Beasts that artists' have created can come out of the Mirrorscape, as Mel, Wren and Ludo discover...but people can also go in. And get trapped.
The three friends discover a vile plot, led by Spute and Mumchance, to arrest Dirk Tot and trap the Master, Ambrosius Blenk, inside the Mirrorscape. Forever. So THEY--Spute and Mumchance--can eventually climb their way higher and higher...and eventually overthrow the Lord-High-Master, Lord Brool, and rule the entire Fifth Mystery!
The three friends journey inside the dangerous world of the Mirrorscape to rescue Blenk, facing many dangers, such as getting buried alive by only one solider and stabbed to death by giant paintings that came to life at the hand of a drunken traitor. And more dangers than just those two! What will happen? Read this fantastic book to find out!
I LOVED this book, the concept was fantastic, the characters were great, and the descriptions of people and landscapes were utterly amazing! While I was reading this book, I was also writing a story of my own, and kept using the word 'clambered'. I knew I had to find another word to use, but my mind was blank. I REALLY like writing, and what was fun that, after a long day of schoolwork and writing my own story, I could sit down and read someone else's story for an hour or two. It was definitely great and...refreshing to read all the wonderful descriptions in Milk Wilk's Mirrorscape book; I think he is a genius. A very hard thing for writers to do is paint a picture in their readers minds and I think that Mike Wilks has most certainly done that, using the best words at the right moments to paint a wonderful picture in his readers' mind as his characters, Mel, Wren and Ludo, journey forth to fulfill their destiny inside a painter's painting, which hangs upon a wall in a room in an academy in a city in the wonderfully and incredibly well-thought out world that Mike Wilks has created. I can't wait to get my hands on the second book!
Mike Wilks, I applaud you.
Profile Image for Julie.
57 reviews7 followers
November 22, 2009
Mel is living his dream. He’s been plucked from his meager existence in his sleepy town and has been brought to the big city to study as an apprentice under a great Master painter. Once there however, Mel finds that life in the big city is not exactly what he pictured.

The head apprentice Groot has it out for him because he knows how much more talented Mel is, and Groot’s uncle who is a big-shot within the main mystery also has Mel on his short list and will go to any lengths to fatten his own pockets and squash Mel like a bug.

But not everything is dim for Mel. He’s made friends for the first time in his life: Wren, a kitchen girl, and Ludo, a fellow apprentice. When running from Groot one day, the friends see the Master doing something in his office they were not supposed to see, and are suddenly thrown into a mystery and a great adventure that could be the difference between life, death, and saving the beauty of art itself.

I’ve got to say right from the start that Mirrorscape was, for the most part, a disappointment. I was interested in the very beginning when poor Mel was torn away from his parents and dragged to the city to hone his skills as an artist. I was intrigued when Mel and Ludo discovered the secret of the paintings they could jump into and experience the sheer world of imagination, and I did think it was awful clever of Mike Wilks to include backward writing (or mirror writing) in his book which required the reader to hold a small mirror up to the book in order to read what was written. I found that to be a stroke of genius, and know that kids will go crazy for it (some people probably thought I was crazy as I came across this part of the book while sitting in the doctor’s waiting room and was holding my compact up to the book)!

On the flipside, after the first half of Mirrorscape however, the story just got silly. I mean, it’s one thing to have an imaginary world that one can experience, for me it was quite another to have the main characters running through several paintings and once and meeting creatures such as walking houses, mountains that attack you, and pyramids that slow down/speed up time. After several chapters of this instead of being endearing and interesting it just got tiresome.

Ok, I know what you’re going to say: “But Julie! It’s FANTASY! What do you expect?” Well, dear Reader, I understand that Mirrorscape was meant to be a high fantasy for kids and was meant to release imagination as well as show that art is something to be admired and appreciated…but I honestly feel that great fantasy has at least some basis in reality. This thought process is hard to explain in a review, but I suppose the problem with Mirrorscape for me, was that I didn’t find the characters to be very deep or believable. I wasn’t scared of the antagonist, I wasn’t excited to enter the mirror world with the main characters, and after several silly scenes which I felt did not further the main plot in any way, I just lost interest.

Basically, I felt that Mike Wilks spend too much of his time basing the story in the mirror world and not enough time in the “real” world of the main characters, and therefore the characters themselves just fell flat. For me, that’s a classic sin in any kind of writing. Flat characters = Flat story, be it YA literature or anything else.
Profile Image for Vishy .
182 reviews2 followers
April 23, 2020
1.5 stars ( 1 for the start + 0.5 for the cover)

The author squanders an excellent opening with some poor plot development and overdone action. Even the main characters remained distant throughout the book.

It was a promising start; the base concepts for the universe the author was trying to portray were solid and absorbing. Mel's introduction and his predicament connected well with me.

But the plot slowly started becoming thin and frivolous. I was hoping after the first action sequence that the plot would improve from there at least. But that never happened.



The characters didn't connect with the reader. One of the main characters was going to sacrifice his life and the reader was only left with a sense of totally apathy about the whole thing.
Profile Image for Jonny Keen.
Author 2 books5 followers
November 25, 2021
I didn't finish this. I just couldn't. It started out well, but the awful characters, by the numbers plot progression, and overall poor structure had my turning off half way through. I knew it was bad when the main character was revealed to be called "Melkin Whomper" (cringe) and things truly went south when the overdone hammy villain starts calling the protag "Smell" instead of Mel. Aw no, I can't. Won't be coming back to this one.
Profile Image for  Ionuţ Oprea.
12 reviews9 followers
June 25, 2020
O idee frumoasa la care orice copil sau tanar artist viseaza. Insa, este scrisa de un artist nu un scriitor. Fiecare trebuie sa isi foloseasca imaginatia si sa construiasca deasupra acest univers.
Profile Image for Rachael.
611 reviews50 followers
October 31, 2009
Melkin Womper has always loved to draw, so it’s a dream come true when he learns he’s eligible to be apprenticed to one of the greatest painters of the day, Ambrosius Blenk. And as soon as Mel leaves his home behind, he knows he’s in for the adventure of his life. The danger starts almost immediately, and Mel has to be extra careful in the unfamiliar city of Vlam not to run into the red robed men from the Fifth Mystery who are convinced Mil is responsible for theft and must be punished. Luckily, Mel has some new friends to look out for him, and the Master also has seemed to take a shine to him. As much as Mel would just like to improve his craft, he can’t avoid the power struggle between the Mystery and the Master he’s been caught in, because Mel has stumbled upon Mirrorscape, the world within paintings in which imagination is the only thing that truly matters. Stumbling in between Mirrorscape and the real world, Mel and his friends will have to use their wits and creativity if they are to survive and ultimately defeat the Mystery.

Mirrorscape is one of the most unique and enthralling fantasy stories I’ve ever read. Like in most fantasies, the unusual setting and specified language take a little getting used to, but thankfully, the new places and words weren’t so different that I couldn’t imagine them at all. I love the idea of hidden worlds within our own, so of course, I was drawn to Wilks’ Mirrorscape, the world within paintings. The very nature of this place lends itself to endless possibilities as far as one’s imagination can go, and that leads to some highly unusual, sometimes strange, but always interesting situations in this story. I heartily commend Wilks for his creative and exciting plot; there wasn’t a moment in this story that failed to capture my interest. In addition, I loved the political undercurrent to this enjoyable story; the corrupt bureaucracy that calls itself the Mystery reflects governmental corruption around the world and its repression of the arts and artistic expression, that of many civil liberties. Although I may be reading too much into the story, this adds a little something extra that makes an already fantastic story even better.

Mirrorscape is the type of story that will appeal to readers of all ages, especially those who enjoyed Inkheart by Cornelia Funke and Poison by Chris Wooding. I particularly cannot wait for the continuance of this story in Mirrorstorm, the second installment in this trilogy.

reposted from http://thebookmuncher.blogspot.com
Profile Image for Silvia.
38 reviews14 followers
February 21, 2016
Mel, einem jungen, sehr begabten Maler wird die Chance gegeben eine Ausbildung bei dem berühmten Künstler Ambrosius Blenk zu bekommen, um vielleicht irgendwann nicht mehr nur mit Tusche zu malen sondern auch mit Farbe. Denn Farbe und so vieles andere ist für einfaches Volk, für armes Volk, unerwartet fern. Die verschiedenen Gilden überwachen alles und um Farbe tragen oder damit malen zu können oder gar bessere Speisen verzehren zu können müssen Pläsiere erworben werden, und diese sind unsagbar teuer. Ebenso bestrafen die Gilden Menschen, die unerlaubt malten, verbotenes aßen, sehr hart und schicken sie in die Minen von wo noch nie jemand zurückgekehrt ist. Mel wäre fast bestraft worden, konnte aber noch rechtzeitig zu seinem Lehrmeister gebracht werden. In dessen Haus fand er auch sehr schnell Freunde, aber ebenso Neider. Was ist das besondere an Ambrosius Blenk? Dass er so real und unsagbare schöne Bilder malen kann? Oder steckt noch mehr dahinter? Mel und seine Freunde werden Zeuge wie Blenk vor eines seiner Bilder ein geheimnisvolles Zeichen in die Luft malt und plötzlich verschwindet. Nach dieser Entdeckung finden die drei Freunde bald mehr heraus, über diese andere Welt hinter den Bildern. Mirror Scape wird diese Welt genannt, sie ist voller Schönheit, Fantasie aber auch Grausames gibt es in dieser Welt. Und die Gilde die durch einen Verräter davon erfährt und alles dran setzt Mel, seine Freunde und den Künstler Blenk in die Finger zu bekommen. Ein aufregendes, unerwartetes und spannendes Abenteuer beginnt.

Mike Wilks schafft es in seinem Buch sicher nicht nur Kinder mitzureißen sondern ebenso Jugendliche und Erwachsene. Wieder ein Fantasy Buch wo man nicht weiß zu welcher Altersgruppe es am besten passt. Der Autor schafft es, dass einem die beschriebenen Bilder und die Mirror Scape Welt vorm inneren Auge erscheint. Es reißt einen mit, und wenn man das Buch fertig gelesen hat, erwischt man sich, dass man in Gedanken immer noch in dieser wunderbaren Geschichte, in diesen Bildern verweilt.
Für mich war es mehr als nur ein gut geschriebenes Fantasy Buch, es vermittelt einem viel mehr. Und vielleicht so etwas wie einen kleinen Frieden in unserem stressigen Alltag.

Mittlerweile gibt es insgesamt drei Bände. Von der deutschen Übersetzung gibt es aber lediglich zwei Bände - der dritte wurde wohl nicht übersetzt.
(Wieder ein Buch auf meiner Liste dass ich herausgeben möchte wenn ich meinen eigenen Verlag haben werde)

www.facebook.com/winkeysbuecherwelt
Profile Image for Christine.
1,424 reviews16 followers
April 18, 2011
The good thing about this book is the imagination of the author, he has it in spades.
The bad thing about this book is the imagination of the author, he overwhelms us with it at every turn.
If you have ever had someone describe to you one of their outlandish dreams, then you have a taste of what it was like to read this book. I just never became vested in the story or the characters and I almost couldn’t finish it.
The author really missed the boat with this one. It is packaged as a young adult novel when it should really be targeted to a younger crowd. If it was published as "The Chronicles of Mirrorscape" and were five separate books of less than 200 pages (with illustrations) chronicling the adventures of Mel, Wren, and Ludo in the Mirrorscape, then we would have a winner with the 2-5 grade crowd. A great example of this is “Spiderwick Chronicles” which elementary school readers need more of. Our younger readers love all this fantastic imagery and simple storylines with only a handful of characters to keep up with and if illustrations are involved, winner!
It really is too bad Mike Wilks wanted to write a 350 page novel.
Profile Image for Elizabeth.
Author 1 book35 followers
October 29, 2014
I am more than a little happy to be done with this one. It had a promising premise that just utterly failed to deliver. I kept thinking that it would have been better as a graphic novel. As the author is an artist, I really fail to understand why it isn't. It's probably not fair to compare, but I've spent the last few months feasting upon the likes of Lloyd Alexander and Shannon Hale. Going from that to this was kind of like going from a crystal flute of champagne to a styrofoam cup of flat ginger ale.

One thing above all others I couldn't/can't/won't get over. There are characters in this book by the names of Ludo and Ambrosius. I mean... LUDO and AMBROSIUS. Even if Mike Wilks is the biggest fan of "Labyrinth" ever, filching names seems like a really lame way of paying homage. And there's no way that's a coincidence. Right?

Sigh. Moving on...
Profile Image for Carolynn Markey.
295 reviews1 follower
February 20, 2017
Well. That went badly. When it started out I assumed it was another cliche "poor kid gets lucky chance at rich kid school" but the mirrorscape, as the book is named, took me by surprise. If you don't know what the mirroscape is, it's . That was interesting. A bit. But the writing is wooden and unimaginative, the main character is blasé and lucky.

I liked the mirrorscape idea and I liked all the fantasy, mythical creatures, but I really think this author took his idea, and then took a bunch of mushrooms, and wrote this. Badly.
Profile Image for Puscas Mircea.
54 reviews5 followers
January 24, 2015
I liked the book . I've read it years ago . The book has a nice cover and a creative story .
Profile Image for Tracey.
3,013 reviews76 followers
January 5, 2020
This started off really well, but then the pace of the story became sluggish . It’s not the greatest of reads though the characters were intriguing.
Profile Image for Maya.
469 reviews
August 15, 2024
Mirrorscape war ein wirklich schnell gelesenes Buch für mich, da es mir sehr leicht fiel, mich auch für längere Zeit auf die Geschichte einzulassen und einiges davon am Stück zu lesen, und die Welt mir wirklich gut gefallen hat, genau wie auch die Grundidee des Buches. Dass man in die Bilder der Welt eintauchen und durch sie hindurchgehen kann fand ich als Konzept wirklich gut.
Leider hat das Buch mich vom Inhalt her aber nicht ganz überzeugen können. Es geht einerseits alles sehr schnell voran und die Geschichte entwickelt sich recht zügig, andererseits ziehen sich teile des Buches dann aber sehr in die Länge. Auch fiel es mir persönlich recht schwer, in das Buch einzutauchen, wann immer Wilks versucht hat, Dinge miteinander zu vergleichen. So ist das Buch eindeutig Fantasy, und der Großteil der Wesen im Buch sind es auch, gleichzeitig werden Wesen dann aber als "so groß wie ein Krokodil" beschrieben, und generell gibt es manchmal Vergleiche, die so gar nicht in die Welt zu passen scheinen, während Mel aber gleichzeitig nicht einmal weiß, was ein geschäft ist, weil es in seinem Heimatdorf keine gab. Das Buch ist aber großteils aus Mels Sicht (aber auch nicht immer, weil manchmal wechselt die Perspektive oder sie bleibt bei Mel aber scheint plötzlich eher allwissend zu sein), was die Vergleiche für mich jedes Mal so unpassend gemacht hat, dass ich nicht wirklich im Stil versinken konnte, obwohl der eigentlich ganz angenehm zu lesen war.
Auch fiel es mir sehr schwer, zu akzeptieren, wie wenig die Hauptfiguren mitdenken. Ich weiß, es sind Kinder, und bis zu einem gewissen Grad ist es vermutlich in Ordnung, gleichzeitig waren viele Fehler aber auch wirklich offensichtlich und wurden auch von ihnen zur Kenntnis genommen, sie schienen aber nie wirklich einen schritt weiter zu denken. Und während ich Mel in Ordnung und Wren ziemlich gut als Figur fand, war Ludo für mich wirklich unglaublich anstrengend, was sich auch bis zum Ende nicht geändert hat, und mir darum doch einiges an Freude genommen hat, wann immer er da war. Ich hatte das Gefühl, dass die Freundschaft zwischen allen Kindern am Anfang wirklich oberflächlich war, und das Buch hat sie zu schnell als Freunde bezeichnet, bei Wren und Mel habe ich die Freundschaft nach kurzer Zeit dann aber auch sehen können, und habe sie als super Team empfunden, und von Ludo weiß ich bis jetzt noch nicht, warum genau Mel und Wren so viel von ihm halten und ihn zu ihrer kleinen Gruppe zugehörig empfinden. In der Hinsicht hatte ich dann auch so meine Schwierigkeiten mit einigen Dingen am Ende ...
Das alles gesagt, war das Buch trotzdem okay. Die Geschichte war durchaus eine gute Idee und hat mir gefallen, auch wenn ich sie teils doch recht brutal fand, und der Plot war ebenfalls recht solide. Ebenso fand ich die Welt wirklich Interessant und mal etwas doch sehr anderes, worüber ich sehr gerne gelesen habe. Ludo und einige Kleinigkeiten haben mir zwar ein wenig die Freude beim Lesen genommen, insgesamt bereue ich es aber nicht, das Buch gelesen zu haben, da ich den Rest doch sehr in Ordnung fand. Kein Meisterwerk, und wer lieber eine eher geordnete Geschichte will ist hier vermutlich auch eher falsch, aber wem ein bisschen Chaos nichts ausmacht, für den ist es vermutlich okay. (Ich habe es aber auch teilweise gehört, wenn ich es nur gelesen hätte, hätte ich vielleicht doch um einiges Länger gebraucht und würde es etwas strenger bewerten, ich bin nicht ganz sicher.)
Profile Image for Rose.
1,531 reviews
November 27, 2022
I think I probably would have gotten into this when I was about 11. I like the idea behind the magic/political system (which are kind of tied up in each other). I just couldn't get into it the way I probably would have when I was younger. The characters and world didn't have quite enough depth to occupy me these days, and I found too many elements predictable and cliched ( e.g. the bully character and his followers). Over all, I could see a lot to like in the book but it never actually hooked me.

I also couldn't get over the sense that this must have been published at the height of Harry Potter Mania, and that crept into the book (a friendship group consisting of two boys and a girl; the girl is unusually talented, the aforementioned bully character who represents the shadier aspects of the class system, the benevolent older master, whose exceptional talent has bought him political power...). Not that the book is a copy-cat as such; there's plenty that's different about how the world works. There's just some surface-level similarities that I suspect were born of the fact that publishers were undoubtedly trying to get the lightening to strike twice.
Profile Image for Kaugummiqueen.
148 reviews21 followers
April 23, 2013
Inhalt
Mel kommt aus einem kleinen Dorf in einer kleinen Provinz Feg. Dort lebt er zufrieden als Sohn eines Webers und verbringt seine Freizeit mit Malen und Zeichnen, denn der Pater der Gemeinde hat genau erkannt, dass Mel großes künstlerisches Talent besitzt.
Als er ihm was Gutes tun will und einige Beispielbilder Mels an die große Künstlerakademie in der Hauptstadt schickt, bekundet diese schon gleich Interesse an dem Jungen. Doch als einige Häscher der großen Gilde in den Heimatort von Mel kommt, gerät er in Gefahr - denn die Farben, die er für seine Bilder benutzt hat, hat er nicht von der Gilde gekauft. Im letzten Moment kann er fliehen und kommt so in die große Hauptstadt Vlam und endlich zur Künstlerakademie von Ambrosius Blenk.
Doch auch dort muss sich Mel mit viel Ärger herum schlagen und als er zusammen mit seinen Freunden Wren und Ludo einige höchst interessante und beunruhigende Entdeckungen macht, ist ihm auch schon die Gilde wieder auf den Fersen...

Meine Meinung
Bei diesem Buch handelt es sich um den ersten Teil einer geplanten Trilogie, wobei bisher nur die ersten beiden Bände erschienen sind.

Melkin Womper, kurz Mel genannt, ist ein ein sympathischer, schüchterner Junge, der in seiner Freizeit liebend gerne malt und ein Einzelgänger ist, da er nicht gerne im Mittelpunkt steht und sich mit den Kindern in seinem Alter nicht so gut versteht. Er soll später ebenfalls das Weberhandwerk lernen, um seinem Vater zur Hand zu gehen. Nur Fra Thenum, der Dorfgeistliche, erkennt das Talent in dem Jungen und fördert ihn, indem er die Bilder Mels in der Kirche aufhängt und an die Künstlerakademie von Ambrosius Blenk schreibt. Mel scheint ein wenig tollpatschig zu sein und das Pech nur so anzuziehen. So steckt er schon zu Beginn der Geschichte in gewaltigem Ärger, als Beauftragte der Gilde von seinen Bildern erfahren.
Mel ist mit seinen jungen Jahren und seinem Verhalten auf jeden Fall eher etwas für jüngere Leser - mehrmals habe ich mich dabei ertappt, wie ich über seine Naivität nur den Kopf schütteln konnte. Zudem stürzt er oft von einem Missgeschick ins nächste, was in meinen Augen auch oft an seiner kindlichen Art lag. Daher würde ich das Buch eher als Kinderbuch einordnen, wobei es dennoch sehr spannend und fesselnd war und sicherlich auch älteren Lesern gefallen kann.

Neben Mel lernt man auch bald Ludo und Wren kennen, die beide ebenfalls in der Künstlerwerkstatt leben, die Freundschaft zwischen den Dreien entwickelt sich erst etwas langsam, da Mel von ältesten Lehrling schikaniert wird und deswegen die anderen Jungen Abstand zu Mel halten und Wren ebenfalls sehr dickköpfig ist. Leider bleiben aber besonders diese beiden Freunde ein wenig blass und farblos, wobei man nur hoffen kann, dass ihre Charaktere in den nächsten Bänden ausgebaut werden.

Wie es oft typisch in einem Kinderbuch ist, so sind die Guten gut und die Bösen böse, was man ihnen allein schon an den optischen Beschreibungen "ansehen" kann. Dennoch hat auch hier der Autor für ein wenig Rätselraten gesorgt, denn tatsächlich gibt es auch hier einen Charakter wie Severus Snape aus Harry Potter, den man sehr lange Zeit nicht einschätzen kann. Dennoch haben mir die Darstellung und die Idee der Gilden gut gefallen, denn jede Gilde ist mit einem Sinnesorgan verbunden und für alles gibt es eine Art "Patent", das der Handwerker kaufen muss, um es zu verwenden. Ein Bäcker, welcher der Gilde des Schmeckens unterstellt ist, muss Rezepte kaufen, um sie backen zu dürfen, beispielsweise. Ärgerlicherweise ist genau die Gilde des Gesichtssinns, also des Sehsinns, die mächtigste und macht somit die meisten Probleme und Mel ist ihr wegen seines Talents ein Dorn im Auge. Durch eben diese Gilden wird dem (jungen) Leser das Patentrecht und Korruption erklärt.

Die Beschreibungen in dem Buch, von den Umgebungen, der Welt und den Geschehnissen sind sehr detailliert und bunt geschrieben, sodass man sich alles gut vorstellen kann, ohne von Eindrücken erschlagen zu werden. Besonders ab dem zweiten Drittel des Buches wird auch die Handlung ebenfalls viel aufregender und man kommt langsam hinter die sonderbaren Geheimnisse hinter MirrorScape, was Mel, Ludo und Wren heimlich entdecken, als sie Ambrosius Blenk beobachten. Diese zeugen von besonders starken Einfallsreichtum, Nervenkitzel und farbenfrohen Beschreibungen. Diese Szenen erinnern stärker an ein Jugend- als an ein Kinderbuch und machen die Geschichte zu einem echten "Page-Turner". Die Seiten fliegen nur so dahin und ab da werden auch die Ereignisse in Vlam in der Künstlerakademie immer aufregender und die Geschehnisse überschlagen sich.

Zum Ende gibt es wieder einen sehr spannenden Showdown, der den Leser nochmals besonders an das Buch fesselt. Das Ende ist an sich durchaus als Abgeschlossen zu sehen, dennoch möchte ich gerne wissen, wie es weiter geht. Zumal ich ja den zweiten Band schon besitze.
Da der Autor auch selber Künstler ist, gibt es am Buchanfang eine Karte von Vlam und zu jedem Kapitelanfang ebenfalls eine kleine Zeichnung.

Fazit
Bis auf die Schwierigkeiten, die ich mit Mels kindlicher Naivität hatte, hat mir der erste Band der MirrorScape Trilogie sehr gut gefallen und lässt auf mehr hoffen. Der Schreibstil des Autors ist gefällig, die Handlung spannend und innovativ und auch die Charaktere sind, mit einigen Abstrichen, sehr authentisch und überzeugend. Daher kann ich das Buch durchaus weiter empfehlen und vergebe 4 Sterne!

Weitere Buchrezensionen gibt es auf meinem Blog Kaugummiqueens Bücherstube (kaugummiqueen.blogspot.de)
Profile Image for Phoebe Ledster.
59 reviews6 followers
January 5, 2022
I started this book when I was in Year 6 and I decided in 2021 I was actually going to finish it!! It was a book that had always stayed with me- the premise of it was so fascinating and one that I often thought of when thinking of the world of books. It holds good memories for me and that is why I enjoyed reading it! It does lack in certain areas- it can seem to go on for a while and it is quite a large book. But it’s fun, exciting, different and full of imagination.
Profile Image for Fi.
13 reviews
February 6, 2022
I wasn't particularly wowed by this book, but the world building and the laws of art was quite enjoyable to experience. How the world is constructed on secrets and greed is not new as a concept, but certainly a colourful one to explore. It was pleasant, slow at first, but pleasant to say the least. I'm unsure as to whether or not I would read the sequel, as this wrapped up quite nicely as a standalone, but who knows, maybe I'll dive back in.
Profile Image for Luka.
208 reviews3 followers
February 6, 2024
Der Klappentext hat in meinem Kopf eine spannendere Geschichte heraufbeschworen als es letztendlich geworden ist.
Ich glaube, das liegt aber auch daran, dass das Buch eher die Zielgruppe 12/13-jährige hat 😅
Obwohl es zwischendurch schon durchaus brutal wird.
Auf jeden Fall regt das Buch die Fantasie sehr stark an, denn die Dinge, die so beschrieben werden, verlangen ein gutes Vorstellungsvermögen!
Es ist nicht unbedingt die übliche Art Fantasie, die hier benutzt wird.
33 reviews
July 6, 2019
I give it 3,5 stars rounded up. I liked the idea of the painting world mirrorscape very much but it was a little too chaotic for me. All the creatures and worlds were a little overwhelming and confusing. I think some great plot chances were thrown away abd some thing stayed a little in the middle? But otherwise I really liked it!
Profile Image for Pomme de Terre.
154 reviews8 followers
September 18, 2020
Read as an audiobook in the car on the way to and from work. I don't think anyone truly cares about the characters or the plot, and I think the author is more enamoured with the all the great set pieces afforded to him by having his characters be able to step into paintings. This turns to work in his favour, as I really enjoyed all the creative, painting-related hijinks he threw at them.
Profile Image for Fryan.
10 reviews
September 21, 2019
I thought I’d love the book. The premise was good having all the senses as “Mysteries”. But reading through, I think the book is losing its grip of my interest. I finished it though and wouldn’t want to read the rest of the trilogy.
Profile Image for Kindra.
5 reviews1 follower
April 20, 2020
Interesting enough read, as an artist I loved all of the artistic references woven through the book. It’s definitely intended for a younger audience though, and I found myself frustrated with a lot of the character portrayal and plot points.
Profile Image for Kassi Siewert.
101 reviews1 follower
February 2, 2021
Read these when I was young, and had a hell of a time finding them again! But I absolutely loved them. All I wanted as a kid was to go inside a painting, and wren was my favourite character.
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