
The Night Circus portrays magic as being a talent practiced by a rare few, without needing spells and fantasy lands. It suggests that it is ingrained within the world, unnoticed by most people except for the ones in the know. In the novel, it is Prospero the Enchanter and the enigmatic Mr Alexander who are the rare exceptions, and they decide to play a dangerous game using Prospero's daughter Celia, and her opponent Marco, representing Mr Alexander, as the pawns. Their venue is the Night Circus, or Le Cirque du Reves, meaning the circus of dreams, a circus unlike any other built especially for the game, although few know this. Inevitably Celia and Marco fall in love, and since the loser of the game must endure severe consequences, this makes it all the more harder for them to try and win.
This novel is the type where you either love it or hate it, depending on what type of reader you are. If you are someone who is more enchanted by the exquisite imagery created by the detail in the descriptions like me, then you will absolutely love this book. The way all the tents in the circus are described and the focus on the senses is just amazing, and it enables you to imagine exactly what it would be like to step through the iron gates of the circus and see the performances. However, if you are more of a person who prefers their books to be less on the descriptive side and more plot driven, then this is probably not the right book for you. Personally I'm a bit of both, as after I finished reading the book I didn't feel like I'd read a story and I didn't feel like I'd taken anything from it away with me, instead it feels rather more like someone has written down your dreams for you to experience again, which is why even though it has a slow moving plot and there aren't solid explanations for how everything works, I still loved reading this.
Anyway I hope you enjoy if you decide to give this a go!
Yas xx
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