Ratings7
Average rating4.1
THE SUNDAY TIMES AND NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER This enthralling novel, inspired by the 2006 film, illustrates that fantasy is the sharpest tool to explore the terrors and miracles of the human heart You shouldn't come in here. You could get lost. It has happened before. I'll tell you the story one day, if you want to hear it. In fairy tales, there are men and there are wolves, there are beasts and dead parents, there are girls and forests. Ofelia knows all this, like any young woman with a head full of stories. And she sees right away what the Capitán is, in his immaculate uniform, boots and gloves, smiling: a wolf. But nothing can prepare her for the fevered reality of the Capitán's eerie house, in the midst of a dense forest which conceals many things: half-remembered stories of lost babies; renegade resistance fighters hiding from the army; a labyrinth; beasts and fairies. There is no one to keep Ofelia safe as the labyrinth beckons her into her own story, where the monstrous and the human are inextricable, where myths pulse with living blood ...
Reviews with the most likes.
Precise rating: 3.5 ⭐
This book was a big surprise for me. After reading the Inkheart trilogy by Cornelia Funke, I realised that I really dislike her writing style. This book though ... it was written so much better! And even though I knew the story already from the movie (that I really love), Funke added just the right amount of extra story to it. Here and there, I was reminded of her bad writing in Inkheart, but at other times, I was touched and even almost cried at the end.