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Labyrinth of Dreaming Books
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Labyrinth of Dreaming Books
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Labyrinth of Dreaming Books
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Labyrinth of Dreaming Books

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars

4.5/5

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About this ebook

It has been more than two hundred years since Bookholm was destroyed by a devastating fire, as told in Moers's The City of Dreaming Books. Hildegunst von Mythenmetz, hailed as Zamonia's greatest writer, is on vacation in Lindworm Castle when a disturbing message reaches him, and he must return to Bookholm to investigate a mystery. The magnificently rebuilt city has once again become a metropolis of storytelling and the book trade. Mythenmetz encounters old friends and new denizens of the city--and the shadowy "Invisible Theater." Astonishingly inventive, amusing, and engrossing, this is a captivating story from the wild imagination of Walter Moers.
LanguageEnglish
PublisherPenguin Group
Release dateNov 8, 2012
ISBN9781468304398
Unavailable
Labyrinth of Dreaming Books

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Rating: 4.295749576151121 out of 5 stars
4.5/5

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Vlot leesbaar en een verhaal dat de aandacht blijvend weet te trekken. Dit fantasy verhaal gebouwd rond boeken is in feite dikwijls voorspellend en langgerekt. Toch worden veel aspecten van schrijven en lezen, kortom het boek, erin verwerkt..
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    A translated edition from the original German; this is book number 4 in the series.I couldn't get into this story easily and it's probably because I've never read this series before and didn't understand what was going on or what the character was about. There's a lot of wordplay in this with names and places which I think makes much more sense in the original language.**All thoughts and opinions are my own.**
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    It'd been a while since I read this, so I picked it up again, and, as it was my third time reading it, decided to annotate it. This was a fun one, especially because of the illustrations. I colored some of them!Yes, if you didn't know, this is a book for adults, with illustrations! Moers is a fantastic illustrator and his drawings really bring life to his work. If you like books about books, fantastical settings, crazy (and sometimes scary) creatures and books that just plain feel magical when you read them, I can't recommend this book enough! It's set in a city that's absolutely devoted to books! I can't fathom why someone who loves books wouldn't want to read it, if only to daydream about visiting such a city. I'll never shut up about how underrated this book is. Please, give it a shot! It's quirky and funny and sad and magical and inspiring and I just love it, ok!?
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Some nice ideas here but not as good as the first two books. Maybe having it set in one place was the key difference.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Just fantastic!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Glücklicherweise konnte ich die Memme in mir genug unterdrücken, um mich von diesem Buch in die "Stadt der träumenden Bücher" entführen zu lassen.Walter Moers, den die Meisten wohl als Schöpfer des 'Käpt’n Blaubär' kennen, schrieb mit diesem Buch eine Hommage an die Literatur und das Lesen. Nie zuvor habe ich mir als Leserin so oft und immer wieder dafür gratuliert, dass ich dieses Buch in der Buchhandlung aufgrund seines bereits witzigen Klappentextes gekauft habe. Denn wenn man als „Memme“ oder „Angsthase“ beschimpft wird, bevor man ein Werk überhaupt aufgeschlagen hat, macht einen das als Leser durchaus neugierig auf mehr. Zu Recht.Die treffende Inhaltsangabe von amazon.de: Hildegunst ist als junge Großechse auf der uneinnehmbaren Lindwurmfeste aufgewachsen, einem Ort, an dem jeder davon träumt, einmal ein ganz großer Schriftsteller zu werden und zu diesem Zweck von den Eltern mit einem ”Dichtpaten” ausgestattet wird. Hildegunsts Abenteuer nimmt seinen Anfang, als sein Dichtpate Danzelot von Silbendrechsler das Zeitliche segnet und ihm ein Manuskript hinterlässt, das es in sich hat: Nur zehn Seiten umfasst es, aber es ruft beim Leser eine Vielzahl stärkster Empfindungen hervor wie kein anderer Text der zamonischen Literaturgeschichte.Leider kennt Hildegunst den Namen des Autors nicht, denn Danzelot hatte die Erzählung von einem angehenden Schriftsteller erhalten und diesem empfohlen, sein Glück in der Bücherstadt Buchhaim zu versuchen. Und so macht sich Hildegunst auf den Weg in die Stadt der Träumenden Bücher, wo an jeder Straßenecke finstere Antiquariate auf Kunden lauern, magisch begabte Buchimisten ihr Unwesen treiben und auch sonst zahllose Gefahren die dem ahnungslosen Bücherliebhaber drohen...Man wird mit Beschreibungen gelockt, von Monologen verführt und durch die Dialoge schließlich um den Verstand gebracht. Ich konnte dieses Buch beim besten Willen nicht aus der Hand legen. Tiefer und tiefer zieht einen das Geschehen; man riecht quasi den Duft von frisch gedruckten Büchern, tollen Leckereien und die gestandene, geheimnisvolle Luft des Labyrinths. Durch die unbeschreibliche Liebe zum Detail rund um alles, was Lesen ausmacht, ertappte ich mich wieder und wieder dabei, mir zu wünschen, ich wäre da.Dieses unbeschreibliche Werk empfehle ich also jedem Fantasygeek und Menschen, die ihre Liebe zur Literatur unbedingt mal ausdrücken wollten.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Die Stadt der Träumenden Bücher ist einfach ein ganze besonderes Buch aus Walter Moers Zamonien-Welt und deswegen lege ich es jedem nahe es zu lesen. Meiner Meinung nach eine Pflicht an jeden der Bücher liebt.. Schon die Einleitung entführt den Leser in einer andere Welt, Es ist kein typischer Bestseller sondern eine Liebeserklärung an die Welt der Bücher in Form eines Buches! Denn Bücher können nicht nur spannend, lustig oder aufregend sein sondern auch einen in den Wahnsinn treiben oder töten. "Nur wer bereit ist, derartige Risiken in Kauf zu nehmen, möge dem Autor folgen. Allen anderen wünschen wir ein gesundes, aber todlangweiliges Leben!"
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This book took me a really long time to finish. It doesn't help that my eyes, as I age, seem to be giving me more and more problems reading books for an extended period of time. Anyway, I enjoyed this book. It was possibly a little slow here and there but still entertaining.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I won't deny it, this book was inventive and unique, but..... not my cuppa tea. As a bibliophile I appreciated everything this book was about, it's ingenious and clever, but again, not my cuppa tea.This story follows Optimus Yarnspinner, a dinosaur from Lindworm castle who ventures to Bookholm to find the author of a manuscript. Once there, things go horribly wrong and he ends up poisoned and in the deep dangerous depths of the catacombs that run deep beneath the city. He fends off bookhunters, booklings, and other horrifying creatures as he tries to make his way back up to the surface. Book lovers and bibliophiles will appreciate the beautiful imagery and book lore, but it might be a bore for others. This story is full of adventure, high fantasy, and bibliophilia but it's not for everyone. Wonderfully written and crafted but I just wasn't feeling it.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Absolutely fell in love with this book....and I fell hard! It was amazing. A book lovers book.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A very interesting fantasy story, full of gentle humour. The protagonist Hildegunst has a pleasant, distinct voice, and the various denizens of Moers' world are novel and enjoyable to encounter (well, not for the protagonist). He's created a world with a believable veneer of history, and illustrated it himself with lively and characterful drawings. On the other hand, this is a long book. My edition is 476 of dense German, which I've spent who-knows-how-many hours reading during two full weeks (and those holiday weeks); the sheer size of the book weighed on me (physically and literally) throughout, and I think the knowledge of just how much was left was diminishing my pleasure in it. I think you could probably have cut down the word count somewhat. There were various sections that didn't really add much to the story - fine in themselves, but just expositing more of Moer's world which was already getting plenty of screentime in this mammoth book. And despite ending up fitter and more paranoid, Hildegunst doesn't really develop much despite his adventures.Just in passing, I get the impression that Hildegunst ("Optimus" - why'd they change the names for the English?) seems more pompous in the translation. I found his voice pleasant enough. I don't think I'll be hunting down more of Moers - while I'm glad to have read this one, I don't think the length-to-entertainment ratio was far enough in my favour.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Imagine a world where books are valued – not like we appreciate books in our society, but really valued. A place where authors are celebrities, first editions are coveted, people memorize and recite famous excerpts, and even crimes are committed over rare books. This is the world of Zamonia, a mythical lost continent, created by German author Walter Moers. The story features an unlikely hero, Optimus Yarnspinner, a naïve dinosaur-like creature from Lindworm Castle, a self-proclaimed author who has yet to be published. The tale begins with the death of Dancelot Wordwright, Yarnspinner’s authorial godfather. He leaves Yarnspinner his most prized possession, a manuscript that is so well written that it can evoke both tears and laughter from the most stoic critic. It is the most brilliant piece of writing – the absolute best of Zamonian literature with one major flaw … the author is unknown. Yarnspinner goes on a quest to Bookholm, the legendary City of Dreaming Books to find this author and hopefully get inspiration to launch his own masterpiece. In Bookholm, innocent and blundering Yarnspinner is no match for the fast paced and smooth talkers of this city and he quickly falls victim to the cruel and slimy villain Pfistomel Smyke. He is poisoned with a hazardous book and left to an unfortunate fate in the catacombs that lie beneath Bookholm. But in the catacombs, Yarnspinner meets some colorful characters, from dastardly book mercenaries to adorable Booklings, that both help and hinder his journey back to the world of the surface.

    If you love to read, then this is the book for you. Moers has created an imaginative vibrant fantasy world that both pays homage and makes fun of books and the literary world. The story is filled with subtle references to all things literary, from creating characters whose names are anagrams of famous authors (Asdrel Chickens is Charles Dickens for example) to making irreverent fun of our book industry. Very fun!
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I think Walter Moers is probably one of the most creative authors I've ever read. After reading 13 1/2 Lives of Captain Blue Bear, I knew that I had to get my hands on more of his works. The Zamonia series isn't something you have to read in order, so I picked up the fourth one because the premise sounded interesting--what bibliophile wouldn't want to read about a city of books!

    While it had it's funny moments, quirky characters, and comical illustrations, I just didn't like this book nearly as much as the first in the series. When the main character, Optimus Yarnspinner, gets stuck in the ancient catacombs filled with books it seems like Moers really drags the story out. I think the book probably could have been 100 pages shorter. I know I say that about several books, and that's because it seems like some authors think that by adding a few chapters to a book to give it some bulk, that somehow, that makes it a better book; this isn't true.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This was really great. Moers's world is richly built, and his prose flows with a generally light touch. He captures both humor and tension to create a thoroughly enjoyable read. In addition, his charming illustrations become critical parts of the narrative, creating a wonderful piece of characterful booksplotation.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Words really do not sum up this book. The tale begins with a flawless piece of writing--which Mr. Moers gleefully withholds for the entirety of the novel, before you get your hopes up--and turns into a shameless, over-the-top, completely enjoyable celebration of books and everything about them. It captures the joy of reading like nothing before, in all its many forms; from studying poetry to touring bookshops, from unlikely attachment to so-called inanimate objects, to the desperation to write. And it does so while at the same time leading our giant dinosaur narrator (no lie) on an epic, terrifying, impossible quest which he very likely won't survive except he does and it is brilliant, brilliant brilliant.The sheer imagination that went into this book cannot be described without questioing Mr. Moer's sobriety. I cannot begin to fathom how he created the world we stumble through--you truly do have to read to understand. It's a book about loving books, taking that passion in hand, and turning it into an entire city housing good, evil, and dozens of shades in between. It's funny, it's dark, it's sad, it's exciting, and it is so fantastically quirky I dare anyone to read this and walk away saying the world isn't full of impossible things.Here's the simple answer:If you read, then read this darn book.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    To anyone thinking of reading this book, don't let the illustrations deceive you into thinking it is a childrens book. One, you will give your children nightmares and two, you will miss out on a very satisfying read. The story is told from the point of view of a Lindworm (dinosaur/dragon) making his first journey to the City of Dreaming Books or Bookholm. Given the that the main character is somewhat cartoonish in nature, one would expect light reading; however, the content is not only mature, but at times disturbing in the sense of very morally defunct evil characters and a less than freindly world. If you can hang on through what, at times, may be a long slog, you will be rewarded by a very touching ending.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I worked in, ran, or owned a bookstore for 15 years. When you do that, you see a lot of the same thing. You start to long for things that are not only good, but have a sort of quirky je ne sais quoi. So for those like me, HERE is a book worth reading!People seem to love to compare Moers to all kinds of writers, but to me he falls into the rather slim category with *The Phantom Tollbooth* and the Moomintroll books - though I'm not sure what to call that category. "Young adult, somewhat conceptual, occasionally metaphysical, with illustrations in a cartoon-like style and an occasionally bizarre sense of humor?"
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Don't you love the title of this book? I decided to name my home The Dwelling of Dreaming Books. Although it is obviously not a whole City, it also has hundreds of books "sleeping/dreaming" away on shelves and in stacks and piles all around waiting to be woken up by someone picking them up or pulling them down off the shelf and opening them to read. I enjoyed this book enough to keep plugging away to the end, but the author could have used a good editor. He tended to get very long-winded in certain passages. I think he may have even realized that as the "translator's note" (it is written as if translated from the original Zambonian Language"), pleads that the original book was several thousand pages longer than what was included here but if he had included it all, the reader would be reading for a very long long time. I myself wondered if I would ever finish. Not sure that I will be rushing to pick up another Zambonia book in the series, but I might. The need to learn more about this wonderful place, might override my caution, I will just be prepared to dig in for a long haul.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I. Loved. This. Book. It was so fun, creative, imaginative and absorbing! Walter Moers has a great imagination and created a fantastic adventure in a city built on books. Thumbs up!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A tale of a young reptilian author who sets off on an adventure and quest to Bookholm, a city filled with publishing houses, bookshops, authors, critics and everything else literary. He soon meets with danger, as all adventurers should.It isn't easy to define my reactions to this book. At times it felt like Dante's Inferno, others it resembled Victor Hugo. What suspense and action there was, soon devolved into endless description or narrative. Clever description and narrative, but not compelling. That being said, I still enjoyed all the allusions and poking fun at literary devises, publishers, writers, readers and reviewers. I don't think there is much in the world of writing that Walter Moers didn't touch on.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I really liked this one. It was the perfect adventure for a book-a-holic.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    "Where shadows dim with shadows mate in caverns deep and dark, where old books dream of bygone days when they were wood and bark, where diamonds from coal are born and no birds ever sing, the region is the dread domain ruled by the Shadow King."This book was a complete impulse buy. I read the back and loved the idea of it. I mean sheesh, the books are ALIVE and the setting is a world created where books are the one and only important thing in life. You are a reader, a writer, or a publisher. A book seller or illustrator. There's dangerous books in the catacombs of this city too. They attack. They are real mean, yo.Optimus Yarnspinner (haha, everytime I say Optimus in my head I immediately go retro to my 80's love and want to end it with Prime)...but I digress. Optimus (for short) has just lost his mentor and godfather. The last gift given was an unpublished manuscript. Optimus reads it and is blown away with how beautiful it is written, in fact, he claims it is the best piece of literature that he has ever read. Unfortunately, the manuscript is written anonymously. Optimus decides his mission is to leave his home and seek out the writer. He must go to Bookholm - the City of Dreaming Books.This is where Optimus's life goes haywire. People are after him because of the manuscript. And people that he thinks he can trust, he can't. Which is how he ends up in the catacombs. And lurking amongst the terrifying books is the Shadow King, determined to kill all who enter his turf.I really really REALLY want everyone of you to turn off your computer and run to your bookstore and purchase this book. It was that good. The names are clever too. He anagrams famous writers. I don't want to give any away to see if you can figure them out. Or better thought, maybe I'll have a contest listing a few of my favorites. *scratching head* and *looking around* at my book loot.This is also apart of a series (evidently). I think that the rest are published in the states but I don't get the sense that you have to read them in order. I didn't after all, and never felt lost in this book. Oh and gosh, there are so many wonderful little tidbit quotes. My book is tagged EVERYWHERE.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    Moers makes the common fantasy author's mistake of getting too carried away with his own creation, and his story becomes a dark, tiresome, cumbersome labyrinth resembling the world it describes. It amounts to not much more than a stack of descriptions of dozens of nightmarish creatures with too few or too many legs, a list of horrible ways to die, and an encyclopedia of psychotic conditions with not much story in between. Although technically laden with plenty of "action," it's of the never-ending-hence-never-occurring-climax variety. Add to this monotony the constant use of the phrase "dear reader" (occasionally "faithful reader") by a narrator who takes the form of an egotistic, slow-witted dinosaur, and you have a thoroughly boring book about books.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I don't have time to write a proper review, but I wan to add to previous reviews. The journey of Optimus Yarnspinner (the aurian narrator) has mythic qualities to it in the subterranean Bookholm. Part of his journey on an underground train has aspects of steampunk to it. The ending is Nordic with a bookish 'Ragnarok'.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Coolest. Book. Ever.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    To be more accurate, The City of Dreaming Books is translated into German by Moers from Optimus Yarnspinner's original Zamonian (and I then read the English translation). This gives an early sense of the fun and fantasy in the Zamonia series.The City of Dreaming Books is the 3rd (or 4th) of the Zamonian fantasy/adventure books, and far and away my favorite; in fact, it is a new favorite book in general. As with the others in the series, this one can be read on its own without having read any of the others. This one recounts the adventures of Optimus Yarnspinner, a young Lindworm dinosaur, a Zamonian species that has a strong appreciation for literature and writing. Each lindworm has an authorial godfather. On his deathbed, Yarnspinner's leaves him an unpublished story, the most incredible piece of writing by an unknown author. Yarnspinner heads off to Bookholm in search of the author, and in search of his own authorial voice. Once in Bookholm, Yarnspinner encounters adventures and dangers both above ground and in the labrynthine catacombs below Bookholm.This is a book about the magic of books and writing. Bookholm, the Catacombs & Unholm are teeming with writers, booksellers, bookhunters, antiquarians, and critics of all stripes. Writing is a mystical, magical art - the best authors rumored to have experienced the "Orm". As with the rest of the series, this is one character's journey of discovery - of new worlds, new creatures, and most importantly of himself. Along the way, I was constantly reminded why I love books - that discovery of new worlds, real or imaginary; the excitement of learning; and the beauty and power of a well-written book.Finally, a brief excerpt which captures how I often feel about reading and language:"I've read and long forgotten many books in my life, but their important features have lodged in my mental net, ready to be rediscovered years or decades later. The incorporeal books of the Weeping Shadows were another matter. They had passed through me like water trickling through a sieve. I thought I'd forgotten them within seconds, but I noticed the next day that some of them had lodged in my mind after all. /I suddenly knew words I'd never read before. I knew, for example, that 'plumose' was an archaic synonym for 'feathered'. Although this knowledge may at first sight seem useless, whenever I visualise a young chick the word plumose strikes me as far more appropriate, somehow, than the humdrum word feathered."
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Without a doubt the most bizarre story I've ever read; however, as utterly alien as I found the lizard-like protagonist and his book-obsessed world (a fantasy milieu of shady, desperate, vengeful and mysterious nonhumans that I suspect might be more recognizable to readers better acquainted with the Earthly publishing business than I), it held me fast, and with every further descent below the surface of its eponymous city, drew me deeper - and served well as a palliative across many sleepless nights during a stressful time. As in The Name of the Rose and Shadow of the Wind, the author subsumes its mysteries under the grand allegory of a labyrinthine library, which seems to stand for both inner mind and outer world.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Optimus Yarnspinner is an aspiring author and a dinosaur living in Zamonia. As an inhabitant of Lindworm castle, he has had the best training under the tutelage of his authorial godfather, Dancelot Wordwright. On his deathbed, Dancelot bequeaths a manuscript to Optimus, a brilliant short story by an unknown author, and commissions his godson to go to Bookholm to discover the writer.This is an endlessly inventive tale that mixes the ridiculous (literary dinosaurs) with smart bookish humor (author names that Optimus lists are anagrams of famous authors in our world). The odd mixture puts me in mind of the Thursday Next series, though in many ways the stories themselves are completely different. But if you have a good imagination, enjoy discovering literary references in unexpected places, and didn't mind the footnoterphone or the Cheshire Cat as librarian in The Well of Lost Plots, then I would recommend Moers' creative yarn. Though the fourth in a series, The City of Dreaming Books was the first that I read and I had no trouble reading it as a standalone. It runs a little long towards the end, but it was such a fun ride that I want to check out the rest of the series.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This book was like riding a roller coaster for me. Some parts were slow and almost dragged on, especially the beginning, then I would read parts that were almost genius. Overall, it was a fantasy story that I felt mirrored what it must be like for aspiring authors. Although, a fantasy world, it brought to life the cut throat world of publishing a story. Would the young writer, a lindworm dinosaur be able to write his first book after his amazing adventure in the catacombs, or would he be slaughtered before he could find his inspiration. I think that question is what kept me reading even through the slower parts of the book. The ending was far superior than the beginning, but my favorite part was his time with the cute little booklings who devoted their lives to reading and memorizing their favorite authors.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    In the tradition of Jansson's Moomintrolls and Juster's Phantom Tollbooth, here we have a story told by Optimus Yarnspinner, a dinosaurish creature whose entire life revolves around books. As our tale opens, Yarnspinner's authorial godfather, Dancelot Wordwright, is on his deathbed. He gives Yarnspinner a short story that is so good that it caused him to stop writing. Yarnspinner then journeys to Bookholm, a city entirely devoted to writing and bookselling, to track down this amazing writer. This book is a real treat for bibliophiles. The illustrations are darling and the literary references are fun to spot. Not a book I probably would have picked up on my own; I'm glad I gave it a try.