The Midnight Library by Matt Haig
Fiction
The elevator speech, short version: There is a library between life and death. The books shelved there represent an endless variety of possible lives—each one offers the reader a chance to live a different life.
Wait—what?? Nora Seed is unhappy with her life and decides to end it, but instead of dying she lands in the Midnight Library, where she has the chance to try different versions of her own life—like new books—until she finds a life she truly wants to live. Guided by a thoughtful librarian, Nora makes new choices with each attempt at an alternate life; which decision will lead to her best life? Haig’s playful tone approaches difficult subjects—suicide, mental illness, and the quantum physics that make the Midnight Library theoretically possible—with a gentle hand. An engaging and whimsical story about living a fulfilling life.
You may also enjoy: Life After Life by Kate Atkinson, another thoughtful story featuring a character living multiple versions of their own life; and Or What You Will by Jo Walton, starring another protagonist that attempts to re-write their story while hovering between life and death.
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