Amber (The Literary Phoenix)
Somehow, over the years, I had forgotten there was an epic grave robbery?!
Don’t get me wrong – generally speaking, I am not a fan of desecration. Even though we historian do a lot of that, well, it’s incredibly disrespectful to the dead. But any sort of adventure sequence in a fantasy book… I’m all in for something like that. Especially because I remember not liking Kitty in my initial reads (I was hooked on Nathaniel’s walk between good and evil) and as I’m re-reading it, I’m realising… Kitty’s storyline in The Golem’s Eye is awesome. There’s great pacing a bunch of adventure. I still don’t love her character particularly, but she gets into a lot of interesting corners and I’m noticing a lot of nuances to her character that make her more complicated than I remember. So if I’ve ever preached about not liking Kitty… I retract it. I retract all of it.
Nathaniel, aka John Mandrake, continues to be a frustrating disappointment. I liked the bit about the hat in Prague, of course, but I just… I want so much more from his character. But here’s the thing, and here’s one of the ways I can tell that I like a book when I’m waffling… when I am more concerned about the characters’ moral dilemmas than their actual characterization… they’re well-written. So while I’m disappointed in Nathaniel as a person, I’m not disappointed in him as a character. The Amulet of Samarkan got me invested, and now I’m rooting for him to make the right choices. Which he does not make when I want him to.
The Golem’s Eye falls a bit short in the plot department.
The golem itself appears early in the book, but for most of the middle and until just about the very end, it disappears and the characters follow other leads, do other things. I personally found it a bit frustrating to feel like there was a complete departure from the plot until a last minute wrap up. While I understand that all the intervening events make the wrap-up possible, they just didn’t seem as cohesive as they could be. For that rambling, roundabout solution, this book loses a bit of points in plot for me.
For anyone who read The Amulet of Samarkand, please know that The Golem’s Eye is not a dealbreaker. In fact, as far as second books go, it’s rather good. There’s no filler slump here, not really. Each Bartimaeus book is a self-contained story, and the worlds of London and Prague are honestly fantastic. The djinn himself amuses me to no end. The first three stories do create an arching plot (Nathaniel’s journey) so I recommend reading this one to get the whole story. It’s good, it’s just not as good as the rest of the books in the series. But I still recommend it!
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Original Rating (Sept. 2014) - 5 stars