Ratings6
Average rating3.5
Read my review on my blog here: https://theconsultingbookworm.wordpress.com/2015/09/12/the-magicians-lie-greer-macallister/
*4.75 - this was so compelling. I was intrigued by Arden's history as well as hooked to know what truly had happened. The perfect mix of mystery, romance and historical fiction.
Honestly 3.5 stars. I liked the characters and most of the story elements and the overall style, but couldn't bring myself to love them. There were things - like Ada's healing wishes and Ray's death can't touch me appearances - that felt over the top while so much else felt very grounded, extremely grounded. I know a story needs an antagonist, but Ray just fell flat for me. I didn't get his motivations or his obsession. Some of the scenes between Ada and Virgil drifted agonizingly to nowhere in particular. I kept thinking hurry up and get back the flashbacks. I wanted to know more about the journey she took. Adding to that, the ending felt rushed. I'd figured out long before who the victim was and who killed him. And I had a pretty good idea, though not all the pieces - as to why. I don't think the author wanted that to be a big secret anyway. I'm actually good with that. I just wanted more. We'd spent pages building to what happened, how Ada wanted and needed to perform, what the final straw was and why, only to get a “I love you more than anything. Let's start over somewhere else. Without all this. ok, sure. The end.”
Some synopsis and descriptions referred to this book as Water For Elephants meets The Night Circus (both books I enjoyed). While I can understand why that comparison might be made, I don't think that was the case at all. Yes, there's a traveling show. Yes, there's a tortured romance. Yes, there's even a bit of magic involved (both real and illusion). But this just wasn't at the same level. I never felt the need to hug a character like I wanted to in Elephants or quote multiple lines like I have from Night Circus. Still if someone asked, I'd probably encourage him/her to givet his story a chance.