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The City of Dreaming Books

The City of Dreaming Books

Optimus Yarnspinner, a young Zamonian writer, inherits very little from his beloved godfather apart from an unpublished short story by an unknown author. This manuscript proves to be such a superb piece of writing that he can’t resist the temptation to investigate the mystery surrounding the author’s identity. The trail takes him to the City of Dreaming Books.

After falling under the spell of this book-obsessed metropolis; Yarnspinner also falls into the clutches of its evil genius, Pfistomel Smyke, who treacherously maroons him in the city’s labyrinthine catacombs. He finds himself in a subterranean world where reading books can be genuinely dangerous, where ruthless Bookhunters fight to the death for literary gems and the mysterious Shadow King rules a murky realm populated by Booklings, one-eyed beings whose vast library includes live books equipped with teeth and claws.

Walter Moers transports us to a magical world where reading is still a genuine adventure, where books can not only entertain people but also drive them insane or even kill them. Only those intrepid souls who are prepared to join Optimus Yarnspinner on his perilous journey should read this book.

Marvellously fantastical.

Sunday Express

Review by 1000 Libraries

Literature rarely receives treatment as a physical ecosystem, yet in the subterranean tunnels of Bookholm, books are as alive and often as dangerous as the creatures tracking them. Walter Moers does not merely write a fantasy novel. Instead, he constructs a profound, meta-fictional celebration of the act of reading itself. To open this book is to follow a young traveler into a sprawling metropolis where rare first editions are hunted like big game and the wrong poem can literally take your breath away.

The brilliance of Moers lies in his ability to personify the creative struggle. He introduces a world where inspiration is a tangible force that every creator spends their life chasing. It serves as a brilliant metaphor for that rare, transcendent moment when a reader or writer loses themselves entirely to the craft.

More importantly, Moers suggests that stories are not passive objects sitting on a shelf. Instead, they are transformative forces that demand a certain level of bravery from the reader. It is a bracing reminder of the grit required to navigate a world built entirely on the power of narrative. For those who believe a bookstore is a sacred place, or that a single perfect sentence is worth a thousand miles of travel, this book is a homecoming. It is a wild, imaginative, and fiercely intelligent ode to the creative spirit that lives within us all.

“Moers' creative mind is like J. K. Rowling's on Ecstasy.”

“A yarn of drollery, deeper meaning and sheer lunacy.”

“You shouldn't underestimate the power of Walter Moers' words, he'll change your life.”

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