

But Schwab is a masterful writer-her prose is hauntingly beautiful and evocative-and although Addie makes some chilling choices, her story builds toward an ending as perfectly satisfying as an ending can be. The novel contains some adult language and also a few bedroom scenes, albeit nothing gratuitous. But she realizes the tragic consequences of her choice when she discovers that her “reward” is an immortal life where no one can remember her. It’s the early 1700s, and Addie LaRue, desperate to escape an arranged marriage, makes a bargain with a dark deity, selling her soul for what she perceives as unfettered freedom. Much like the film It’s a Wonderful Life, the novel shows us how choosing a different existence would change not just our own life trajectories but also those of others-perhaps in terrible ways.

Who of us hasn’t wondered how different our lives would be if we’d made different choices? If we’d gone to College A instead of College B? If we’d married Person C instead of Person D? And if we could have a do-over, would we want one? The Midnight Library depicts a magical place, in between the life we’ve lived and the lives we could have lived, where we can enter-in progress-what seems like the better life.
