FICTION: THE MAGIC OF STORIES
Imagine a place hidden from the world, filled with books in every nook and corner, adorned with torn pages from storybooks and gilded with secrets and symbols as old as time. Imagine a place where all tales, adventures, fables, fairylands and dream-worlds are amalgamated into one single story. Such is the Starless Sea, the pivotal setting of Erin Morgenstern’s new novel of the same name.
The Starless Sea is a subterranean labyrinth filled with stories hidden far beneath the surface of the earth. It is a place “for those who feel homesick for a place they’ve never been to. Those who seek even if they do not know what (or where) it is that they are seeking.” The mere idea of this place touches the heart of every reader and lover of books. With its intricately beautiful imagery, melodious poetic prose and a heart-warming storytelling style, The Starless Sea is Morgenstern’s ode to bibliophiles. For anyone who has read (and liked) Morgenstern’s first novel, The Night Circus, this new novel may have probably been their most-awaited book of the year. If there were one thing I expected from The Starless Sea, it was magic. And magical it was. But that’s probably one of the few expectations it meets.
The story begins with a promising start as we are introduced to the protagonist, Zachary Ezra Rawlins, a 25-year-old introverted millennial. He is the son of a professional fortune-teller, studies Emerging Media at what seems to be a fictional Ivy League university and loves playing video games and reading books. Zachary finds a book called ‘Sweet Sorrows’ in his university’s library which intrigues him very much because it does not have anything mentioned on it, not even the name of the author, the publisher or the year it was published. It turns out to be one of several books donated by the mysterious Keating Foundation decades ago, according to the library’s records. Upon reading, Zachary finds it to be a collection of different short stories which seem both metaphorical and literal at once. The book also describes the Starless Sea in all its magnificent glory, protected as it is by acolytes, guardians and keepers. The twist comes when one of the stories in ‘Sweet Sorrows’ describes a past event from Zachary’s life which no one, except he himself, knows about. Shocked and intrigued, he tries to get to know more about the book and the Keating Foundation.
Zachary’s only clues are symbols — of a bee, a key and a sword — carved on the book. These lead him to a literary masquerade party at the Algonquin Hotel in Manhattan. Here, he meets a woman dressed up as the character Max from Maurice Sendak’s Where the Wild Things Are and a storyteller called Dorian who enchants him with a tale about time and fate. Dorian — who seems to know every detail about Zachary’s life — later meets him outside the New York Library and tells him how there are certain people who want to take Zachary’s book away from him.
Dorian and Zachary head over to the collector’s club, which is “their” headquarters, to hand over to “them” a book disguised as ‘Sweet Sorrows’. After the occurrence of several other events, Zachary opens a door painted by the mysterious Mirabel — who turns out to be the woman dressed as Max — and finds himself in a harbour of the Starless Sea. The harbour looks exactly how it is described in ‘Sweet Sorrows’, but is entirely devoid of any people except the keeper, Rhyme the acolyte, and lots and lots of cats. Dorian is wounded by Allegra, the apparent leader of the collector’s club, and is left behind. However, he is soon saved by Zachary and Mirabel as they go back for him.
Symbols, metaphors, intricate imagery and poetic prose come together in this labyrinthine novel that is an ode to bibliophiles everywhere
From here, the story proceeds extremely abstrusely, as readers struggle to decipher symbols, understand metaphors and keep track of the story itself which is divided into six ‘books’: ‘Sweet Sorrows’, ‘Fortunes and Fables’, ‘The Ballad of Simon and Eleanor’, ‘Written in the Stars’, ‘The Owl King’ and ‘The Diary of Katrina Hawkins’. The main story runs parallel to these books in alternating chapters. The first five books are a collection of short stories and initially, none of them truly makes sense, but they are told with such poetic exquisiteness and aesthetic imagination that each is a standalone piece of art. Slowly and gradually, however, the stories interlace, enabling the reader to at least deduce the characters that are being talked about, and learn about them.