Saturday 5 December 2020

The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue


Book Title: The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue
Author: V.E. Schwab
Date Started: October 17th 2020
Date Completed: December 5th 2020
Genres: Romance, Historical, Fantasy
Quality Rating: Four Stars
Enjoyment Rating: Three Star
Final Rating: Three Stars
Review:

◆ Thanks to NetGalley for this eBook copy for review ◆

The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue was quite a long way from what I had thought I was going to be reading when I picked it up that can, for me, ultimately be distilled into a cool concept made too convoluted. While I'm used to a good mix of adventure/mystery from her stories (or at least a little fantastical drama), this time Schwab chose to go down the purely romantic genre with a historical flair, which caught me a little off guard. It is fantastical too, but it doesn't feed too much into the story.

I will openly admit that part of why this novel felt so dragged out was because I was reading it over the course of nearly three months. While not necessarily that long, it does pack a lot of prettily-written information into every sentence. I love that about Schwab's writing but I'm still puzzling over one thing: why is this book the same three scenes over and over again? Addie gets forgotten by a past lover; Addie gets taunted by Luc; Addie and Henry do coupley things. Over and over again, set in slightly different (and conveniently recognisable) historical time periods. There are only two significant plot points, first when Addie meets Henry about a third through and then when she tries to save him at the end - other than that, nothing changes across the entire novel, and it felt so out of character for Schwab's storytelling that I was even more uneasy about the whole thing.

At the start, I felt the book was overly sentimental and, by the end, I suspect that may be the root of why I didn't enjoy it. You can see Schwab has poured her heart into it, but there's no discipline in the storytelling; there barely is a story, it's all so fragmented and dreamy, but without a driving force (or even really a goal) as a result. This glimmers of character and moments in time and images are beautiful and so clearly emotionally relevant to the writer, but it's all so patchworked together it felt unpolished as an actual novel for me.

The above being personal preferences, I do also want to point out that the final resolution to this book was disappointing even if you disagree with my stylistic observations. Why is it always that the boy gets redemption and the female protagonist 'sacrifices' something. I'm so bored of that trope, especially with a character like Addie who otherwise rejects all expectations of what she should be unless she makes them for herself.

My overall takeaway from the book was quite disappointing given how much I love some of Schwab's other work and how much hype there was around this particular one. For me, it just petered along the same way all through and then fell back onto a cliche at the end. I'm sure a lot of people will like it a lot, and I'm not saying it's necessarily bad - but I don't understand some of the creative choices, and it's not my thing overall.

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