
Description:
Editorial Reviews
Reviews:
5.0 out of 5 stars honest and soul bearing
A wonderful story about regret, the choices we make that build our lives, and self agency. Creative, tender, philosophical and poetic. A must read.
4.0 out of 5 stars Thought provoking story.
"The Midnight Library" is one of those books that really "hit home" the older I get and the more regrets I have. What if there was a way to undo your regrets? What would your life look like? This story follows a MFC named Nora who gets the opportunity to see how her life could be if she had made different choices. Matt Haig is a talented author that brings out deep emotions in his readers. If you have ever read any of his other books, "The Midnight Library" has the same kind of emotional depth as his other works.I ordered the hardcover and it was delivered in perfect condition. No bent or dented edges, which seems to be rare from Bolo book deliveries in my personal experience. It is a fairly quick read being only 288 pages. For a book that is not my genre of choice, I found it to be a pretty nice read.
5.0 out of 5 stars quaint lovely book
What a fun book and nicely written. I really enjoyed the story and the parallel message. It’s an easy read and the ending doesn’t disappoint.
3.0 out of 5 stars Good (not great) - could have been more IMO
I am an avid reader. This novel is difficult to rate. While other review did not like the beginning of the story, I actually thought that was the best part. By midway through, I got bored of all the “lives” and started to become frustrated w the main character, Nora. It just seemed long and a bit tedious to me. I liked the concept and it was creative. Yet it lacked real character development as well as no additional important characters. All in all, a decent read , but certainly not the best novel or life changing as others wrote. It started great but left me kind of flat
5.0 out of 5 stars A beautiful and pleasant story
With much wisdom, this existential meditation, the quantum multiverse, is a compelling, pleasant story. Intelligent, emotive, thought provoking. A wonderful, introspective novel.
4.0 out of 5 stars life affirming
The Midnight Library is a lovely and easy-to-read magical realism story. Designed to be life-affirming, it's well written and clever and accomplishes what it set out to do. This book is a quick read and easy to enjoy.
5.0 out of 5 stars Great vacation read
Easy read, somewhat predictable but still very enjoyable. Characters were lovable, and the book had a nice overall life lesson through storytelling. This is a great book for when you don't want something too heavy but still want a good story with relatable characters. 5 stars, thanks Matt!
5.0 out of 5 stars Full of philosophical aphorisms & lots of Easter eggs & ideas about happiness and choices and life
So many options can be pursued when evaluating a book. Did the author create believable and consistent characters? Did the author manufacture vivid scenes and detailed locations? Did the author include Easter eggs for the reader to find, anagrams of names (like in the Series of Unfortunate Events) or a play on words or an alliteration or metaphors or similes or puns? Did the author include references to real world events or people or places that the reader can connect to? Did the author explore a familiar concept in a new way? Did the author give the characters words to say that connect with the reader and their view of life? Did the author overuse actual dialogue or internal monologue to explain the story instead of relying upon actual action.There are so many options for the reviewer, just as there are so many options for the main character in this book. Nora Seed finds herself in a library at the stroke of midnight, with lots of books around her and a librarian from her childhood, Mrs. Elm. Each book represents a different version of Nora’s life, a life of joys and sorrows, people and places, events and tragedies that spawned from a single choice, a decision, or in the case of this girl so full of regrets, something that didn’t happen because she didn’t make that choice.Of course, there is the root life, the life that Nora remembers living, a life full of disappointments and settling, that led to her attempted suicide and her visits to the Midnight Library. A moment in between, where she isn’t alive and in her body yet she isn’t dead (with the finality that means for self and others). And there are all of those other lives that she now gets to explore, lives where she doesn’t remember any of that Nora’s life, but finds herself plopped there with a kid yet no memory of this child, or as a wife with no memory of sleeping with her husband, or as a glaciologist with no memory of what such a scientist knows, or as a pop star with no memory of the words to popular songs, or as a pub owner with no memory of what to do when closing. Lives, but without the memories that led her there.An interesting thread running throughout the book is that of Hugo, another slider who explores his own lives. Hugo and Nora meet up several times, though find that the other isn’t what they want and each chooses to go back to their own terminal, hers a library and his a video store. I expected them to meet up at the end, as they had such a powerful connection through their sliding, both aware of themselves and of others, but no. it wasn’t to be. I’m not disappointed, just wondering if such a possibility exists, and if I will get this chance one day. And I wonder how Hugo arrived at this point, if his was also a suicide, and if it only happened to suicides or lives so filled with regrets.A question I still have is about the character of Mrs. Elm (for Nora) or the uncle (for Hugo) and the place where these shamans or guides or facilitators resided. Both sliders found themselves in an in-between place with a familiar character as the trusted one, not someone who used them but someone who in real life helped them find their own way. A good person. An older person who helped at a pivotal time in their life. I find it cool that the author (Matt Haig) crafted a god-like character, not one who superimposes her/his will on you but one who is limited in what they can do by the physics of the world (a library or a video store) they are trapped in. Not all-powerful. Not desiring worship. Not governed by human impulses (power and sex). But a personal god whose sole interest was in the needs and wants of a single person, a much better concept (to me) than the invented gods of the modern world that seem interested in humanity as a whole (and worship and knee-bending and blind obedience and all of that stupidity). If we could wipe away all of the old gods and create a new god for each person today, this would be the kind of god I would like to think about. Though there is that question about universality, and whether everything we think and feel isn’t just arising from our own experiences, including all of this god-talk.I enjoyed finding things in this book. Like the title, on page 31. And the name of the band, a variation of the Kurt Vonnegut classic, Slaughterhouse Five. And the name of the music shop that sounds like the idea behind all of the lived lives in this book, String Theory. And the references to Bedford and Pottersville, connecting readers to the classic movie, “It’s a Wonderful Life”. And life-fright being similar to stage-fright. And the role of chess in the book, from its beginning to its end, something that used to be a major part of my own life as an educator. And glitches in the library that stemmed from Nora thinking differently about death than she did in her root life. And I had to look up “grasshopper suicide”, because the character told me to, and how many forms of life there are (almost nine million), and Frank Ocean (“Moon River” was awesome).Another interesting concept is that of time. Time doesn’t pass for Nora in the real world as she pulls out numerous books from the library shelves, some exploring for a few minutes, others for hours or days or months. Yet the clock never moves past 12:00 in slide after slide, life after life, universe after universe, until her thinking changes in such a way that she no longer regrets the choices she made in her root life. And then the clock starts ticking and Mrs. Elm warns her that she must do just one thing in order to survive, pick that one book, and, wait, I don’t want to spoil it for you, but it gets to 00:03:48.If you want to know what happens to Nora, then read this book. It is really good and worth your time. And if you are the philosophical type (as I am), then keep a notepad and pen nearby so that you can write down the interesting thoughts and ideas that flow from the mind of Nora Seed, the questions she ponders, the truths she shares with the world. And I will end on a final thought, one found on page 137, about life and what it is: “…acres of disappointment and monotony and hurts and rivalries but with flashes of wonder and beauty.” Something to think about.
Both a Memoir & Overture of Life - This is Awe-Inspiring
I find myself lately reading what I think are very good books. From the pleasant to the thought provoking to the fun to the serious and enlightening to the masterful to the beautiful to the despairing and tragic. This I tell you is a read that yet again I cannot properly articulate into language on the fundamental essence of its themes and context. To put simply, it is quite something that I totally did not expect in many ways, although I expected in some. But as I read and discovered, it is truly remarkable.So here is what I will write with my utmost ability in describing something so accessibly written and simply said, yet so profound and significant. What comes to mind when I recall back as I turned from page to page is a question - “What Does It Mean To Be Human?”. It is apparent to me that I am yet again, reminded that what seems to be the things we want aren’t necessarily so and the things we truly need or want have been many a times right in front of us I suppose.When I look up at the stars at night, I am acutely aware how insignificant and meaningless we all are individually. How abysmal most of our efforts are in trying to live up to Human made concepts of what is considered to be an appropriate life and how one should behave. What I have learned from this is that there is no appropriate way, there is of course being a decent human being and how we can treat each other better. But there is NO absolute way of living. There is just living and figuring it out as we go along.The Midnight Library would definitely be one of my cherished books for this time around, as it solicits perspectives, drives hard the extremes of what is possible, and forces one to contemplate infinity and the singularity of all things. For some reason, I feel hope because I feel I have a better understanding of what being present in your current situation entails. This perhaps is cliche and cringy to say, but it’s the truth. I believe we all know this, but we tend to need reminders every now and then. After all, our perfection as individuals and on the whole; Humanity, is that our perfection lies within the imperfections, the Chaos of Life.I conclude my personal review with this; with another idea or perhaps a stipulation: everyone has their own direction of life and their own codes of philosophy to live by, yet the as we slowly step towards the vast and endless unknown, it is the potential of the indeterminate future that allows us to discover new things, try different things, and grow and break and grow and break again. I believe that is what we call progress. If you cannot tell from my bias, this book is definitely worth the time to read and consider and contemplate. I am in a situation right now where I am hesitant on certain moves and of future prospects, but this has provided some much needed clarity.Not bad Haig. You indeed did your job.
Perfeito!!
Eu simplesmente amei o livro!!! O inglês é bem fácil de ser compreendido e a história é bem fluída. Eu gostei da personagem principal e também em vários momentos me vi no lugar dela. Chorei em algumas partes porquê o autor consegue transmitir os medos dela de maneira que chega a doer, o que tornou a experiência de leitura muito única. Foi meu primeiro livro deste autor e espero ler outros.
Best of the best
Bolo is the best platform for online shopping for the following reasons:Fastest delivery!Literature options beyond SA border!Easiest payment options!Would love to see more exposure on International brands.
Fiyat
Fiyatı dışarıya göre çok uygun teşekkürler
A story that lingers, a book I cannot wait to revisit!
The Midnight Library is a must-read! Note: If you’re not a fan of fantasy elements, you might initially find it challenging to connect with the story. Although, the core message is universal and deeply impactful.I gave myself time to reflect on the book after finishing it before writing this review because it left a profound impression that I wanted to fully experience first.When I picked up the book to read, I was navigating one of the most challenging periods of my life. And because of this, the book resonated on a deeply emotional level. It triggered moments of joy, love, happiness, sadness, anger, loneliness, and everything in between.Matt Haig took me on a beautiful journey through themes of regret, mental health, choices, loss, and grief. While I sometimes found the main character, Nora, frustrating, the story is less about her personality and more about the choices she makes. It’s a reflection of the universal “what if” moments we all face and how those alternate paths might not have led us to where we truly want to be or even where we thought we wanted to go.The book encourages its readers to re-examine their regrets while offering a perspective that can be both eye-opening and healing. To some extent, it also challenges you to rethink how you view your past actions and choices and to reframe them in a more compassionate light.One of the most powerful lessons of The Midnight Library is its emphasis on life’s inherent uncertainties. It gently reminds us that unpredictability is inevitable and invites us to embrace it with open arms instead of resistance.This is a story that lingers, a book I cannot wait to revisit. It’s more than a novel, it’s a lens through which to view our choices, regrets, and the meaning we seek in life.
Visit the Penguin Books Store
The Midnight Library: A GMA Book Club Pick: A Novel (The Midnight World)
AED8747
Quantity:
Order today to get by 7-14 business days
Delivery fee of AED 20. Free for orders above AED 200.
Imported From: United States
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Visit the Penguin Books Store
The Midnight Library: A GMA Book Club Pick: A Novel (The Midnight World)

AED8747
Quantity:
Order today to get by 7-14 business days
Delivery fee of AED 20. Free for orders above AED 200.
Imported From: United States
At BOLO, we work hard to ensure the products you receive are new, genuine, and sourced from reputable suppliers.
BOLO is not an authorized or official retailer for most brands, nor are we affiliated with manufacturers unless specifically stated on a product page. Instead, we source verified sellers, authorized distributors or directly from the manufacturer.
Each product undergoes thorough inspection and verification at our consolidation and fulfilment centers to ensure it meets our strict authenticity and quality standards before being shipped and delivered to you.
If you ever have concerns regarding the authenticity of a product purchased from us, please contact Bolo Support. We will review your inquiry promptly and, if necessary, provide documentation verifying authenticity or offer a suitable resolution.
Your trust is our top priority, and we are committed to maintaining transparency and integrity in every transaction.
All product information, images, descriptions, and reviews originate from the manufacturer or from trusted sellers overseas. BOLO is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or an authorized retailer for most brands listed on our website unless stated otherwise.
While we strive to display accurate information, variations in packaging, labeling, instructions, or formulation may occasionally occur due to regional differences or supplier updates. For detailed or manufacturer-specific information, please contact the brand directly or reach out to BOLO Support for assistance.
Unless otherwise stated, all prices displayed on the product page include applicable taxes and import duties.
BOLO operates in accordance with the laws and regulations of United Arab Emirates. Any items found to be restricted or prohibited for sale within the UAE will be cancelled prior to shipment. We take proactive measures to ensure that only products permitted for sale in United Arab Emirates are listed on our website.
All items are shipped by air, and any products classified as “Dangerous Goods (DG)” under IATA regulations will be removed from the order and cancelled.
All orders are processed manually, and we make every effort to process them promptly once confirmed. Products cancelled due to the above reasons will be permanently removed from listings across the website.
Description:
Editorial Reviews
Reviews:
5.0 out of 5 stars honest and soul bearing
A wonderful story about regret, the choices we make that build our lives, and self agency. Creative, tender, philosophical and poetic. A must read.
4.0 out of 5 stars Thought provoking story.
"The Midnight Library" is one of those books that really "hit home" the older I get and the more regrets I have. What if there was a way to undo your regrets? What would your life look like? This story follows a MFC named Nora who gets the opportunity to see how her life could be if she had made different choices. Matt Haig is a talented author that brings out deep emotions in his readers. If you have ever read any of his other books, "The Midnight Library" has the same kind of emotional depth as his other works.I ordered the hardcover and it was delivered in perfect condition. No bent or dented edges, which seems to be rare from Bolo book deliveries in my personal experience. It is a fairly quick read being only 288 pages. For a book that is not my genre of choice, I found it to be a pretty nice read.
5.0 out of 5 stars quaint lovely book
What a fun book and nicely written. I really enjoyed the story and the parallel message. It’s an easy read and the ending doesn’t disappoint.
3.0 out of 5 stars Good (not great) - could have been more IMO
I am an avid reader. This novel is difficult to rate. While other review did not like the beginning of the story, I actually thought that was the best part. By midway through, I got bored of all the “lives” and started to become frustrated w the main character, Nora. It just seemed long and a bit tedious to me. I liked the concept and it was creative. Yet it lacked real character development as well as no additional important characters. All in all, a decent read , but certainly not the best novel or life changing as others wrote. It started great but left me kind of flat
5.0 out of 5 stars A beautiful and pleasant story
With much wisdom, this existential meditation, the quantum multiverse, is a compelling, pleasant story. Intelligent, emotive, thought provoking. A wonderful, introspective novel.
4.0 out of 5 stars life affirming
The Midnight Library is a lovely and easy-to-read magical realism story. Designed to be life-affirming, it's well written and clever and accomplishes what it set out to do. This book is a quick read and easy to enjoy.
5.0 out of 5 stars Great vacation read
Easy read, somewhat predictable but still very enjoyable. Characters were lovable, and the book had a nice overall life lesson through storytelling. This is a great book for when you don't want something too heavy but still want a good story with relatable characters. 5 stars, thanks Matt!
5.0 out of 5 stars Full of philosophical aphorisms & lots of Easter eggs & ideas about happiness and choices and life
So many options can be pursued when evaluating a book. Did the author create believable and consistent characters? Did the author manufacture vivid scenes and detailed locations? Did the author include Easter eggs for the reader to find, anagrams of names (like in the Series of Unfortunate Events) or a play on words or an alliteration or metaphors or similes or puns? Did the author include references to real world events or people or places that the reader can connect to? Did the author explore a familiar concept in a new way? Did the author give the characters words to say that connect with the reader and their view of life? Did the author overuse actual dialogue or internal monologue to explain the story instead of relying upon actual action.There are so many options for the reviewer, just as there are so many options for the main character in this book. Nora Seed finds herself in a library at the stroke of midnight, with lots of books around her and a librarian from her childhood, Mrs. Elm. Each book represents a different version of Nora’s life, a life of joys and sorrows, people and places, events and tragedies that spawned from a single choice, a decision, or in the case of this girl so full of regrets, something that didn’t happen because she didn’t make that choice.Of course, there is the root life, the life that Nora remembers living, a life full of disappointments and settling, that led to her attempted suicide and her visits to the Midnight Library. A moment in between, where she isn’t alive and in her body yet she isn’t dead (with the finality that means for self and others). And there are all of those other lives that she now gets to explore, lives where she doesn’t remember any of that Nora’s life, but finds herself plopped there with a kid yet no memory of this child, or as a wife with no memory of sleeping with her husband, or as a glaciologist with no memory of what such a scientist knows, or as a pop star with no memory of the words to popular songs, or as a pub owner with no memory of what to do when closing. Lives, but without the memories that led her there.An interesting thread running throughout the book is that of Hugo, another slider who explores his own lives. Hugo and Nora meet up several times, though find that the other isn’t what they want and each chooses to go back to their own terminal, hers a library and his a video store. I expected them to meet up at the end, as they had such a powerful connection through their sliding, both aware of themselves and of others, but no. it wasn’t to be. I’m not disappointed, just wondering if such a possibility exists, and if I will get this chance one day. And I wonder how Hugo arrived at this point, if his was also a suicide, and if it only happened to suicides or lives so filled with regrets.A question I still have is about the character of Mrs. Elm (for Nora) or the uncle (for Hugo) and the place where these shamans or guides or facilitators resided. Both sliders found themselves in an in-between place with a familiar character as the trusted one, not someone who used them but someone who in real life helped them find their own way. A good person. An older person who helped at a pivotal time in their life. I find it cool that the author (Matt Haig) crafted a god-like character, not one who superimposes her/his will on you but one who is limited in what they can do by the physics of the world (a library or a video store) they are trapped in. Not all-powerful. Not desiring worship. Not governed by human impulses (power and sex). But a personal god whose sole interest was in the needs and wants of a single person, a much better concept (to me) than the invented gods of the modern world that seem interested in humanity as a whole (and worship and knee-bending and blind obedience and all of that stupidity). If we could wipe away all of the old gods and create a new god for each person today, this would be the kind of god I would like to think about. Though there is that question about universality, and whether everything we think and feel isn’t just arising from our own experiences, including all of this god-talk.I enjoyed finding things in this book. Like the title, on page 31. And the name of the band, a variation of the Kurt Vonnegut classic, Slaughterhouse Five. And the name of the music shop that sounds like the idea behind all of the lived lives in this book, String Theory. And the references to Bedford and Pottersville, connecting readers to the classic movie, “It’s a Wonderful Life”. And life-fright being similar to stage-fright. And the role of chess in the book, from its beginning to its end, something that used to be a major part of my own life as an educator. And glitches in the library that stemmed from Nora thinking differently about death than she did in her root life. And I had to look up “grasshopper suicide”, because the character told me to, and how many forms of life there are (almost nine million), and Frank Ocean (“Moon River” was awesome).Another interesting concept is that of time. Time doesn’t pass for Nora in the real world as she pulls out numerous books from the library shelves, some exploring for a few minutes, others for hours or days or months. Yet the clock never moves past 12:00 in slide after slide, life after life, universe after universe, until her thinking changes in such a way that she no longer regrets the choices she made in her root life. And then the clock starts ticking and Mrs. Elm warns her that she must do just one thing in order to survive, pick that one book, and, wait, I don’t want to spoil it for you, but it gets to 00:03:48.If you want to know what happens to Nora, then read this book. It is really good and worth your time. And if you are the philosophical type (as I am), then keep a notepad and pen nearby so that you can write down the interesting thoughts and ideas that flow from the mind of Nora Seed, the questions she ponders, the truths she shares with the world. And I will end on a final thought, one found on page 137, about life and what it is: “…acres of disappointment and monotony and hurts and rivalries but with flashes of wonder and beauty.” Something to think about.
Both a Memoir & Overture of Life - This is Awe-Inspiring
I find myself lately reading what I think are very good books. From the pleasant to the thought provoking to the fun to the serious and enlightening to the masterful to the beautiful to the despairing and tragic. This I tell you is a read that yet again I cannot properly articulate into language on the fundamental essence of its themes and context. To put simply, it is quite something that I totally did not expect in many ways, although I expected in some. But as I read and discovered, it is truly remarkable.So here is what I will write with my utmost ability in describing something so accessibly written and simply said, yet so profound and significant. What comes to mind when I recall back as I turned from page to page is a question - “What Does It Mean To Be Human?”. It is apparent to me that I am yet again, reminded that what seems to be the things we want aren’t necessarily so and the things we truly need or want have been many a times right in front of us I suppose.When I look up at the stars at night, I am acutely aware how insignificant and meaningless we all are individually. How abysmal most of our efforts are in trying to live up to Human made concepts of what is considered to be an appropriate life and how one should behave. What I have learned from this is that there is no appropriate way, there is of course being a decent human being and how we can treat each other better. But there is NO absolute way of living. There is just living and figuring it out as we go along.The Midnight Library would definitely be one of my cherished books for this time around, as it solicits perspectives, drives hard the extremes of what is possible, and forces one to contemplate infinity and the singularity of all things. For some reason, I feel hope because I feel I have a better understanding of what being present in your current situation entails. This perhaps is cliche and cringy to say, but it’s the truth. I believe we all know this, but we tend to need reminders every now and then. After all, our perfection as individuals and on the whole; Humanity, is that our perfection lies within the imperfections, the Chaos of Life.I conclude my personal review with this; with another idea or perhaps a stipulation: everyone has their own direction of life and their own codes of philosophy to live by, yet the as we slowly step towards the vast and endless unknown, it is the potential of the indeterminate future that allows us to discover new things, try different things, and grow and break and grow and break again. I believe that is what we call progress. If you cannot tell from my bias, this book is definitely worth the time to read and consider and contemplate. I am in a situation right now where I am hesitant on certain moves and of future prospects, but this has provided some much needed clarity.Not bad Haig. You indeed did your job.
Perfeito!!
Eu simplesmente amei o livro!!! O inglês é bem fácil de ser compreendido e a história é bem fluída. Eu gostei da personagem principal e também em vários momentos me vi no lugar dela. Chorei em algumas partes porquê o autor consegue transmitir os medos dela de maneira que chega a doer, o que tornou a experiência de leitura muito única. Foi meu primeiro livro deste autor e espero ler outros.
Best of the best
Bolo is the best platform for online shopping for the following reasons:Fastest delivery!Literature options beyond SA border!Easiest payment options!Would love to see more exposure on International brands.
Fiyat
Fiyatı dışarıya göre çok uygun teşekkürler
A story that lingers, a book I cannot wait to revisit!
The Midnight Library is a must-read! Note: If you’re not a fan of fantasy elements, you might initially find it challenging to connect with the story. Although, the core message is universal and deeply impactful.I gave myself time to reflect on the book after finishing it before writing this review because it left a profound impression that I wanted to fully experience first.When I picked up the book to read, I was navigating one of the most challenging periods of my life. And because of this, the book resonated on a deeply emotional level. It triggered moments of joy, love, happiness, sadness, anger, loneliness, and everything in between.Matt Haig took me on a beautiful journey through themes of regret, mental health, choices, loss, and grief. While I sometimes found the main character, Nora, frustrating, the story is less about her personality and more about the choices she makes. It’s a reflection of the universal “what if” moments we all face and how those alternate paths might not have led us to where we truly want to be or even where we thought we wanted to go.The book encourages its readers to re-examine their regrets while offering a perspective that can be both eye-opening and healing. To some extent, it also challenges you to rethink how you view your past actions and choices and to reframe them in a more compassionate light.One of the most powerful lessons of The Midnight Library is its emphasis on life’s inherent uncertainties. It gently reminds us that unpredictability is inevitable and invites us to embrace it with open arms instead of resistance.This is a story that lingers, a book I cannot wait to revisit. It’s more than a novel, it’s a lens through which to view our choices, regrets, and the meaning we seek in life.
Similar suggestions by Bolo
More from this brand
Similar items from “Time Travel”
Share with
Or share with link
https://www.bolo.ae/products/U0525559493