The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue by V.E. SchwabMy rating: 4 of 5 stars
This book was absolutely incredible. I am a fan of Schwab’s other work, so I was extremely excited about ‘The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue,’ especially as Schwab has talked on multiple occasions about it being a book that really means a lot to her. I went in with high expectations, and yet somehow, it exceeded every one of them. I absolutely adored every moment of this book - it took me through such a range of emotions and utterly broke my heart. It kept me guessing until the end, as I never truly knew exactly what would happen next, despite my constant guessing. This book is beautiful, the characters are incredible, which is definitely one of the most compelling books I have ever read.
This is a very character-driven book, and Addie as a character is wonderful because she is flawed. She spends her life forgotten, so she has picked up many bad habits to survive. I really liked the fact that Addie is not perfect because she is a reflection of human existence. She has gone through so much and yet never loses her love for art or life. She has gone through the best and worst of human existence and still finds joy in the world. She finds something new, and I feel like we all need a bit of Addie in our lives to remind us that joy can be found in the strangest of places. In this book, there are so many incredible characters, predominately Henry, the person who remembers her, and Luc, the devil who cursed her. But each person that Addie meets adds a new layer to the story and a new outlook and insight into this world. Each chapter was a new exploration, a new idea, explored through encounters with Addie's people.
The plot seems like a simple ‘person sold their soul to the devil to live forever’ kind of story, but it is so much more than that. There is so much to this book, but it is best left discovered in your own time. This book starts slow in that it slowly pulls you into its rhythm, flipping backward and forwards in time between events that all build upon each other. This creates the feeling that it’s weaving you into the story, dropping hints here and there until you’re so caught up in what will happen next that you can’t think of much else and don’t want to stop reading. This is definitely a book that will stay with me for a long time and keeps haunting my thoughts.
‘The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue’ is thought-provoking and brings up many thoughts about the nature of existence and what it means to live. Can we really live without making a mark on the world, or is it the impression we have on others that makes us real? I wasn’t expecting this book to raise many philosophical questions and make me rethink the nature of existence, relationship with art, and the meaning of life, but it did! It made me think a lot about my own insecurities about life, being forgotten, and the nature of art and reality. I’m sure these thoughts won’t quite so plague many readers, but they were such an important part of the book, in my opinion, and they have left an impression on me in the most interesting way! There’s also such a focus on art in the book, which ties the whole thing together in such a wonderful way. There was such a love of art that came across in the pages. It felt like a love letter to creativity at times, which I found really inspiring.
Overall, I absolutely adored this book. It was beautiful, lyrical, incredibly written, and haunting. It took me through such a range of emotions and left me wanting more. The characters were fantastic, the story was gripping, and it lived up to and then exceeded every one of my hopes. Schwab is a master storyteller, and this is her best book to date. This book is special, full of joy, and I hope everyone who reads it loves it as much as I do
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