Woman auditions infinite alternate lives. I wanted her to get a hobby.
First, let me say that this book is so far outside my usual reading habits that I had to create a book journal category called "Wild Card" just to shelve it somewhere. My comfort zone is thrillers, mysteries, serial killers, and people making terrible decisions while being chased by dangerous people. This book is about one woman making terrible decisions while being chased by her own regrets.
Close enough, I suppose.
The story follows Nora Seed, who has reached the point where she believes she has no purpose, no value, and no meaningful place in the world. Her job is gone. Relationships have fallen apart. Even the elderly gentleman she used to help no longer needs her assistance. Then her cat dies. Honestly, it reads like the opening verse of the saddest country song ever written.
After deciding she no longer wants to live, Nora finds herself in the Midnight Library, a strange place between life and death. There she encounters the Book of Regrets, a massive volume containing every choice she wishes she had made differently. It nearly suffocates her.
From there, Nora gets the opportunity to explore alternate versions of her life. What if she had stayed with the boyfriend? What if she had pursued competitive swimming? What if she had become a famous musician? Each life presents a different possibility, and if she finds one she truly loves, she can stay.
Now, this is where my reading experience may have differed from many other readers. A lot of people describe this book as inspiring. Hopeful. Life-affirming. Meanwhile, I spent a large portion of the novel wanting to grab Nora by the shoulders and say:
"Would you please stop doing this to yourself?"
I wasn't discovering the lesson alongside Nora. I felt like I had already figured it out and was waiting for her to catch up.
The entire book is built around regret. Every road not taken. Every opportunity missed. Every alternate version of success she imagines she should have achieved. But I kept coming back to the same thought: Whose success are we talking about? Her father's? Her mother's? Her friend's? Society's?
What about Nora's?
The more alternate lives she visited, the more I found myself thinking that she was searching for the wrong answer. She wasn't looking for her purpose. She was looking for proof that someone else's version of success would have made her happy.
Life doesn't work that way. Life is messy. And it's certainly not linear. Everyone has ups and downs. Sometimes those downs are devastating. Sometimes they knock us flat. Sometimes they last far longer than we'd like. But we keep going. That's not because every day is wonderful. It's because our lives matter whether we can see that fact clearly or not.
One of the things I did appreciate was Nora reconnecting with her old school librarian. That felt fitting. Out of all the fantastical elements in the novel, that relationship felt grounded and genuine. It reminded me that sometimes the people who influence our lives most aren't the loudest voices or the biggest successes. Sometimes they're simply the people who showed up when we needed them.
By the end of the book, Nora learns that her life has value and that no alternate existence is perfect. It's a good message. I just arrived there a few hundred pages before she did.
In the end, I didn't dislike The Midnight Library. I appreciated what it was trying to say. I understand why so many readers connect deeply with it. But while Nora spent the novel auditioning alternate universes, I kept wanting to hand her a cup of chamomile and say: "Your cat died. Your job fell apart. You're disappointed in yourself. Fair enough. Now stop shopping for different realities and figure out what you want to do tomorrow."
Maybe that's the thriller reader in me.
Or maybe it's just life experience talking.

















