There’s something about The Midnight Library that reminded me of Daisy Jones and the Six and The Glass Hotel.
The Midnight Library is the story of Nora Seed. She’s feeling down and out. Nora loses her job, loses her piano student, loses her cat. It’s a bad day in a line of bad days. Nora decides to end her life but instead of a straight line to heaven or hell, she ends up at the midnight library where the librarian Mrs. Elm (who she hasn’t seen since elementary school) helps her find a better life. The library is full of books, all of which are the outcome of different life decisions.
Nora can see what life is like if she’d followed her swimming dreams to the Olympics, if she’d stayed in the band with her brother, if she’d gone to Norway to study glaciers.
Each life offers a lesson. Each life offers the opportunity for Nora to live out her life in a different reality. Of course there’s a lesson here, but the novel does not come across as schmultzy. It’s a fun, fast-moving read about regrets and the choices we make.