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Inkheart

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Author - Cornelia Funke ... [Goo?] [Posters]

This Paperback Book item from Scholastic Paperbacks was reviewed on 9-Oct-2008.

Search ISBN:0439709105 offer from Abebooks or used books from Alibris. Inkheart Reference Book. Classifications : Action & Adventure Literature Children's Books 4-for-3 Books Store Custom Stores Specialty Stores Books General Literature Children's Books 4-for-3 Books Store Custom Stores Specialty Stores Books Sci . Click the following link to view the cover of Inkheart.

Related topics: Action & Adventure. Literature. Children´s Books. 4-for-3 Books Store. Custom Stores. Specialty Stores. Books. General. Literature. Children´s Books.

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1) Paperback Book Inkheart by Scholastic Paperbacks. Inkheart by Cornelia Funke (Hardcover)

Ok so I have to admit this book started off slow. Its boring for about the first half. But I stuck it out and read until the end and was so glad I did. This book is so magical you can imagine everything Cornelia Funke wrote down. This book made me think so much it was truly amazing. I love all of Cornelia Funke´s books and I´m currently working on Inkspell the second book in the trilogy. If you like fairy tales and magic then this is the book for you!¤

2) Paperback Book Inkheart by Scholastic Paperbacks. I am 46 years old. I read the book (about 500 pages) in two days or so. So I must admit it was fascinating. Nevertheless, it was a great disappointment, considering the Thief Lord.
The main problem is that most of the characters are not interesting, two dimensional, and not very credible. So I read it in one breadth and all the time felt it isn´t really good.¤

3) Paperback Book Inkheart by Scholastic Paperbacks. As an adult, reviewing a children´s book is fraught with danger. It´s all too easy to forget you´re not the target audience and don´t necessarily see things the way the author intended. Having said that, it seems the most successful children´s books these days are those that manage to appeal to both old and young alike (Quidditch, anyone?), and so on that basis I feel at least partly qualified to write a review. Any kids reading this who think I´ve totally missed the point of the book - please forgive me - you too will be old and out of touch one day.

Inkheart is a very long book. At a whopping 500 plus pages it ranks as one of the longer children´s books around. Unfortunately a lot of this length is taken up with unnecessary exposition, narration and description, often slowing the action to a crawl or even a total standstill. There really is a lot to be said for crediting your readers with intelligence, but the author too often spoon feeds us exactly what to think, imagine and feel instead of giving us the basics and letting us do the rest. A good editor with a pair of scissors and an evil grin could easily have reduced the page count to 200 or so, creating a much better story in the process.

As for the characters, I found the good guys to be generally likable and to an extent believable. The baddies were a different category altogether. Capricorn and his cronies are straight out of the corny stereotypical villains handbook, complete with black clothing, and as a result they come across as more comical than evil. I kept expecting Mini-Me to leap out of the shadows and make an appearance, particularly when the age old cliché of scheduling your enemies execution at a later date appeared. The author is clearly gifted with a good imagination, I just wish she had used it more when developing the protagonists.

Seeing as I´ve probably upset enough people already, I may as well press on with a pedantic point. I had a beef with her use of elvish from the Lord of the Rings. At one point the characters apparently write messages to each other in this language, but the reader is never shown the actual words used. In my opinion if a writer is cheeky enough to make use of Tolkien they should take the time to do it properly, otherwise it comes across as lazy appropriation of a great body of work. Surely it wouldn´t have been too difficult to employ the services of a translator to actually put the messages in Quenya or Sindarin, it would have gone a long way towards giving the author credibility.

Overall, the premise of this story is exciting and original, but for me the problems mentioned above turned what could have been a gem into an extremely ordinary and forgettable book. I give it one star for the concept, but none for its execution.
¤

4) Paperback Book Inkheart by Scholastic Paperbacks. For anyone who loves to read, whether child or adult, this is a great fantasy story. I wish I´d had this when I was young. It has the potential of becoming a classic. Bought this for my 12 year old niece for Christmas.¤

5) Paperback Book Inkheart by Scholastic Paperbacks. This is the book for all the bookworms out there--the classic idea of a book popping to life when the right person reads it aloud.

It´s an intensely creative story populated by Funke´s traditional quirky, flawed characters that give so much heart and strength to an already-awesome, fast-moving plot.

It´s a fairy tale world of horror and adventure, good vs. evil and all that lies in between.¤

6) Paperback Book Inkheart by Scholastic Paperbacks. One cruel night, Meggie´s father reads aloud from a book called INKHEART-- and an evil ruler escapes the boundaries of fiction and lands in their living room. Suddenly, Meggie is smack in the middle of the kind of adventure she has only read about in books. Meggie must learn to harness the magic that has conjured this nightmare. For only she can change the course of the story that has changed her life forever. This is INKHEART--a timeless tale about books, about imagination, about life. Dare to read it aloud.¤

7) Paperback Book Inkheart by Scholastic Paperbacks. Meggie’s father, Mo, has an wonderful and sometimes terrible ability. When he reads aloud from books, he brings the characters to life--literally. Mo discovered his power when Maggie was just a baby. He read so lyrically from the the book Inkheart, that several of the book’s wicked characters ended up blinking and cursing on his cottage floor. Then Mo discovered something even worse--when he read Capricorn and his henchmen out of Inkheart, he accidentally read Meggie’s mother in.

Meggie, now a young lady, knows nothing of her father´s bizarre and powerful talent, only that Mo still refuses to read to her. Capricorn, a being so evil he would "feed a bird to a cat on purpose, just to watch it being torn apart," has searched for Meggie´s father for years, wanting to twist Mo´s powerful talent to his own dark means. Finally, Capricorn realizes that the best way to lure Mo to his remote mountain hideaway is to use his beloved, oblivious daughter Meggie as bait!

Cornelia Funke’s imaginative ode to books and book lovers is sure to be enjoyed by fans of her breakout debut, The Thief Lord, and young readers who enjoyed the similarly themed The Great Good Thing by Roderick Townley. (Ages 10 to 15) --Jennifer Hubert¤

Page Updated: Robert N. Goolsby, 6-Nov-2008, 04397091059780439709101, 9X0-120-050-860-SEB-O0B-I8B-DKB-8


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