A magical realism novel about the power and importance of libraries.
Libraries. What are they good for? Many things as it turns out. Libraries are collections of books, yes, but they are havens, safe spaces, sanctuaries for people, especially readers. Libraries are inherently magical spaces. Historical fiction writer Kate Quinn turns to fantasy and magical realism in her paean to libraries and books, The Astral Library.The novel centers around our protagonist, Alix, and holds it in a first person point of view throughout the book. Alix has a rather hardscrabble life, living on a couch, less than $40 in her checking account, and working three jobs to not make ends meet. To say that she is living on the edge would be an understatement to be sure. A series of unfortunate events (including a bout of identity theft) puts Alix over the edge. But our bibliophilic reader finds a portal in the Boston Public Library into the titular Astral Library. Every book ever written (and some that are still in progress) are available here. Even better, she can go into a book to live in. Into the world of the book, to be clear. Like Gumby, or perhaps more contemporary, like an Isekai LitRPG, people who come to the library can choose a book to enter into its world.
The Astral Library chooses its readers to be allowed to do this, and Alix is the latest choice. But as our protagonist gets set to live in a book, her world and the world of the library come under threat. For, you see, the librarian of the Library is not in complete control of the Astral Library. Instead, a Board seeks to modernize and change and update the Astral Library... and not, as Alix learns for the better. This board seeks to bring the Library into a modern mold, complete with side helpings of “improvements” like curating the library for texts that are “inappropriate for children”, for starters. Alix finds herself on the front lines of a conflict to protect the Astral Library she has just discovered.
This is the central plot conflict of The Astral Library.
The central character conflict and development, the romance, is between Alix and her best friend Beau. Beau is in a hardscrabble existence of his own, resonantly, as he is trying his best to make it as a fashion designer. He’s gotten some breaks, but he is on the edge of success, or of utter failure. But thanks to an IOU that Alix has, he has promised her a dress for a single occasion. And when she enters the library, she has such an occasion to cash in that IOU. But beyond that, the arcs of a slow burn romance slowly come to the fore between them.
But really, this novel is about the magic of books and what the power of the magic of books and libraries have to offer, especially in times when the sources of that magic is under threat. For all of its whimsicalness, the novel does go rather topical and sometimes rather dark, both with Alix’s life and with the threat that libraries face in general. This novel is all about what libraries face. Does it have a bulletproof solution to what is to be done in a world where libraries are being squeezed and squeezed? No. The novel is a fantasy about, among other things, being able to stop and fight back against some of these forces. It’s a novel about believing in libraries and their mission. This is a novel about believing in books.
So why was I dissatisfied with this novel as much as I was? All the elements of a magical library are there, all the elements of why books are magical things and celebrating the magic nature of books. And not just books, but other art as well Alix finds out there are sections of the library devoted to art that one can enter. There is even a tie in to one of Quinn’s historical fiction novels in the process. The book loves books and is unapologetic about that love.
But for me the worldbuilding of the book just did not hold up to any sort of scrutiny or reflection. I am going to leave the details of this to an end note, if you do not want to be spoiled. And yes, while this is a magical realism novel, the consequences of the worldbuilding were more than a bit ungainly, once they became obvious to me, they harmed my enjoyment of the story. And even for a novel that is at its end an allegory about the dangers that libraries are under and the wonder and power of libraries and books, the worldbuilding flaws (which also lead to a downbeat in the character arc between Alix and Beau) marred my enjoyment.
I wanted to like, love and immerse myself in this book far more than I did. The book is very uncomfortable in spots, Alix really is in a tough situation at the beginning and at points, the author does press onto sore spots in Alix with strong pressure. This novel may be a comfort read at points but at other points, it hits rather hard. But overall. the heart of the themes and ideas of The Astral Library are in the right place, But for me, the execution just doesn’t quite match up.
End Note
Alright. A couple of things bothered me about the worldbuilding. Spoilery and again, read this only if you want to.
The major one is how time works here. It is established in the novel that no time passes within the library itself. You can walk in and as long as you stay within the library itself and do not go into the world of a book, time relative to the outside world does not pass at all. If you go into the world of a book, then time runs at a rate equal to that of the real world. So a number of the patrons are spending chunks of their lives doing this, one of them is basically cycling through The Tale of Genji over and over again. There is mention that you can continue to live in a book “after it’s over” but that the results are unpredictable. So patrons renew the books and start over and over again. Come out of the book, a year has passed, renew and go back in.
The problem, you will see immediately, is how can things in the outside world impinge upon the library at all if it is timeless? The Library Board sends messages and threats into the library but how can that possibly work if time inside of the library itself stands still? It is explicitly explained by the librarian that if you enter the library at 5pm on a Friday, and if you don’t go into a book, you leave the library at the exact moment that you entered. So how can the library receive threats at all? The chase scenes through the books we get are fine, its established that book time is equal to ours. The author forgets this again when Alix tries to read the forthcoming Song of Ice and Fire book... which is changing as the author changes his mind. Again, those changes can’t happen because the library is a fixed point in time that when you leave, it is the time that you entered.
And then there is the other worldbuilding quibble. This is a realpolitik problem of how the novel dances around copyright issues. The novel does an excellent job with the love and lore of books. Alix is a Reader, capitalized. She name drops a host of books and authors throughout the work, and the author’s own enthusiasm for these books is unmistakable. So, naturally, once Alix is first explained that she can live in a book, she immediately starts naming off books that are in copyright. Narnia. Middle Earth. She is shut down completely and firmly by this and told that she can only live in books that are in the public domain. She cannot visit and live in books that are in copyright, as a way of respecting the authors and their work. While I understand the problems and copyright issues, the sheer awkward nature of this restriction glared out at me. Narnia and Middle Earth have authors who are dead. Their estates own the copyrights. While I get how the author has a problem here, Alix is shut off in an unsatisfying way. And what of things that are in the public domain in some places, and not others. The early stories of Ian Fleming (James Bond) are in copyright in the United States but entered into the public domain in Canada, there was even a Canadian published anthology that used this fact. Are the Ian Fleming Bond stories available to be "lived in" or not?
What I think annoys me is not that the author is trying to escape lawsuits and problems, but that the solution just doesn’t fit with the rest of the library’s ethos and nature. For example, it is pointed out that multiple readers can live in the same book, but they are in their own worlds and versions of that world and thus won’t meet, living parallel lives in versions of the same book. That argument goes to copyrighted books, too, after all. The version of Middle Earth I have in my head is my own and is idiosyncratic. Maybe if it was mentioned that there was a special archive where people could enter books in copyright (but phrased in a more smooth manner), the weird restriction would not have irked me, so. Slow down Alix’s charge to get to Cair Paravel by having plot happen first, and the problem solves itself by the end of the book and it doesn’t seem like there is a very weird tiered version of access in the Library based on copyright. This in itself goes against the entire theme of the book, which is perhaps why it irks me so thoroughly.
The counterargument to this entire end note is that the worldbuilding is not, to use the phrase I got from Liz Bourke meant to be "load-bearing". Which means that the worldbuilding elements are not what matter and to focus on the inconsistencies does a disservice to the book and what it is for.
Highlights:
- The wonder and love of libraries and books.
- Immersive scenes and locations
- Queer friendly.
POSTED BY: Paul Weimer. Ubiquitous in Shadow, but I'm just this guy, you know? @princejvstin






