Book Review : The Magic Toyshop by Angela Carter

Posted on February 18, 2008 in Uncategorized

 

The Magic Toyshop tells the surreal “rites of passage” story of Melanie and her transition from innocent girl to sexualised woman. After a tragic event ends her comfortable, idyllic childhood, she is forced to move to London and live with her tyrannical puppet-obsessed uncle and his unusual family above the toyshop he owns. 

    At around 200 pages, this is a relatively short read but Angela Carter packs the pages with poetic language and imaginative imagery. In fact, it’s dripping with so much symbolism an A-Level English Lit teacher would have a field day. Melanie’s experience of the harsh reality she finds herself in is frequently unpleasant and there is an unremitting claustrophobic atmosphere that gives the book an unsettling edge. A classic example of magic realism, the book draws you into a bizarre but vivid world of suppressed emotions and alarming truths.

     Beautifully written, compelling and disturbing, this modern fairytale is hardly a laugh-a-minute but it is a surprising and absorbing read.
 
Read this if… you like your books a bit surreal with a feminist, anti-patriarch vibe.
Don’t read this if…you’re freaked out by swans and men who don’t wash.