The Midnight Library by Matt Haig

Oh my, this was a beautiful book! So honest about all the secret regrets and things we hate about ourselves, as well as definitive lessons on how to let go and embrace the spectacular now. A wonderful lesson, for all age ranges, with no difficult language, and a short read. Everything you could want, packaged up nicely. 

I will confess, I had a hard time getting into the story of Nora and the confusing alternate dimensions were hard to wrap my head around, but I loved the story in the end. To see someone who genuinely didn’t want to be alive anymore and was looking for any way out suddenly realize that everything was perfect in her life just as it was a beautiful concept. I am a human, and as such, I have regrets. I think this book will touch other humans who also have regrets because it is a universal truth that we all have regrets. That’s my pitch, thank you for coming to my TedTalk. 

I loved the lesson, and I’ve been thinking a lot about it since I finished the book. We all wish we could have done something differently—taken that other offer, chosen something else, made that different decision. And, life is full of these small choices we make every single day to get to where we are right now. Sitting here, me, writing, you, reading, we both had to have made exactly the same decisions that we did in this life in another one to end up here. I know that doesn’t make sense, but I think you get the idea, right? 

Either way, just think about how your life would have changed entirely if you had done something minorly different—everything would be different. Now, this can be seen as an escape by many people, and for Nora, it is. She hates her life, feels like she’s let down everyone around her, has missed every opportunity, and made nothing of herself. Then, she has the chance to change herself, to live in an alternate dimension where she made a different decision at a certain point in time. 

For a time, Nora can’t believe her luck; this is exactly what she wanted! But is it, really? As she tries out the various different versions of herself, she finds that they all don’t feel right. They don’t feel like her; it’s almost as if she’s trying to live a life where she has to be someone she’s not. 

The lesson of the book is such an important one. We all feel like we regret so much about our lives, and wish we could do better, when in reality, there’s only one you, and you don’t realize how many things are going the way they’re supposed to be. 

Genre: literary fiction

Age: 12+

Rating: 8/10