Member Reviews
It took me awhile to realize Love narrates this story. I loved how the book mobile connected and lit up everyone in the village.
I picked this book up because I enjoyed The Little Paris Bookshop by Nina George. Although I didn't like this quite as much, it was still a good story and is somewhat of a sequel or at least had a tie-in to The Little Paris Bookshop.
Description:
“Everyone knows me, but none can see me. I’m that thing you call love.”
In a little town in the south of France in the 1960s, a dazzling encounter with Love itself changes the life of infant orphan Marie-Jeanne forever.
As a girl, Marie-Jeanne realizes that she can see the marks Love has left on the people around her—tiny glowing lights on the faces and hands that shimmer more brightly when the one meant for them is near. Before long, Marie-Jeanne is playing matchmaker, bringing true loves together in her village.
As she grows up, Marie-Jeanne helps her foster father, Francis, begin a mobile library that travels throughout the many small mountain towns in the region of Nyons. She finds herself bringing soulmates together every place they go—and there are always books that play a pivotal role in that quest. However, the only person that Marie-Jeanne can’t seem to find a soulmate for is herself. She has no glow of her own, though she waits and waits for it to appear. Everyone must have a soulmate, surely—but will Marie-Jeanne be able to recognize hers when Love finally comes her way?
My Thoughts:
This was atmospheric and I think was reaching for magical in the writing. It was narrated by Love, and had characters like Death, Logic, Chance, Fate, Wonder and Time. It also had a very old olive true dispensing wisdom. I found the first half of the book rather slow and it didn't really get my interest until halfway through. I enjoyed the story of Marie-Jeanne and how she tried to help others find love through delivering books. Also, I enjoyed how reading books changed the community. The concept of the "bookabus" was fun.
Thanks to Random House Publishing Group - Ballantine through Netgalley for an advance copy. this book will be published on July 25, 2023.
Love is the theme, and the character. This was a beautiful book to examine words and the concept of love...but a slow and disjointed read for plot.
Thank you to the author ,the publisher and NetGalley for the ARC.
Book review at 3 1/2 stars, but rounded down to 3.
This book was definitely interesting! I loved how “Love” narrated most of the story - I thought it was very different to what I expected going in. The premise was interesting and the characters were quirky. I liked seeing how they all interacted and felt like it was a genuine family.
The writing itself was beautiful and very poetic - which as a book about book lovers, you would almost expect.
However, It felt very slow and I had to put it down and come back multiple times. It also threw me off when jumping between the narrators and the pacing just made it hard to keep reading it through.
I think this is something I could try coming back to later and loving, but at least while I’ve been trying to read it in the last couple of months, it just didn’t hold my interest.
Sweet read but took a while to get there, and lacked a bit of heft.
The telling of this tale comes from the perspective of Love, which took quite some time to set up before any weight of storyline came in. Getting invested in the story and characters was slow going initially because of this.
This centers around Marie-Jeanne, a young girl in France taken in by foster parents (Francis and Elsa). When Francis decides to create a mobile book lending business, smart-as-a-whip Marie-Jeanne tags along, giving her the opportunity to meet and observe a number of new people, and ask lots of questions. Over time, we learn Marie-Jeanne sees love differently than most people, which fascinates and frustrates her.
Many of the characters were very charming — certainly enough to spin this out into a series of books, if George desired - and diving into their lives added some great color to the story. Matchmaking (in books, and then in love) was an overriding theme and I enjoyed the suggestions that were given to various villagers throughout. It boggles my mind that many of these people wouldn’t have heard of even the most popular of books/authors, but I chalked that up to these being a very remote area. One takeaway for me was that I quite obviously should be reading Simone Weil…
Ultimately, a lovely read if you enjoy a bit of whimsy and have patience wading through the beginning.
Thank you to Net Galley and Ballantine/Random House Publishing for this advanced copy. All opinions expressed here are my own.
The Little Village of Book Lovers is such a unique and poetic book. Filled with symbolism and love, this story can be a difficult read for many. Though I appreciated much of the lyrical writing, I did not connect as well to story as I had hoped to do. I do believe this is written and would be loved by a very specific type of reader who would put this on their all-time favorites list in a hurry.
Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for the ARC in exchange for my honest review.
I just reviewed The Little Village of Book Lovers by Nina George.
Thanks to NetGalley and Ballantine Books for my ARC in exchange for my honest review. This book will be published July 25, 2023.
This book was confusing and disjointed. Marie-Jeanne has a unique ability to see Love in other people. She uses this when she tries to match books to the person. That was the part I was interested in. But there are other virtues (that appear capitalized like characters) that show up. There is a talking Olive Tree. And there are really long run-on sentences.
This was a slow, confusing and painful read and not at all what I was expecting. Sadly I cannot recommend it.
I found out that this is a companion book to “The Little Paris Bookstore,” which I haven’t read, though I think this book can be read as a stand-alone. This book has a lot of descriptions (a bit too poetic for my taste), but it’s a lot thin on plot. From the title, I thought there would be a bit more discussion about books and the people who read them but it seemed, since this book is narrated by “Love,” more about, well, love and soulmates. While this book is lovely and thoughtful, this book didn’t deliver for me with more of a solid storyline and solid characters. I wish I’d liked this book more than I did.
I received an ARC of this novel from Netgalley in exchange for an honest review.
A sweet novel about found families and beloved books.
Thank you to the author and publisher for providing me with a digital ARC of this title via Netgalley in exchange for my honest review.
I was immediately attracted to this book from the title and was pleased to have the opportunity to read it. I found the characters to be likable and ones I could connect to from the start. I cared about them and wanted to see what would happen. I loved the narrative from Love and the idea of emotions being a character in the story. It was so creative and enjoyable. I really liked Marie-Jeane who was touched by Love as an infant after losing both parents. Love watches her grow in her foster home and realizes his touch left her with the ability to see love growing in others. Creative, enjoyable read
With Love as the narrator, Nina George takes the reader to remote France during the 1960s in The Little Village of Book Lovers. As an infant Marie-Jeanne has an encounter with Love which enables her to see the light that Love has left on people. As she grows up, she helps her foster father start a mobile library that travels through the small villages around Lyons. She can help people find their soul mates. but can she find someone she can love?
Thank you to @netgalley and @BallatineRandomHouse for this ARC. Marie-Jeanne is born into love. She is touched by love as an infant and now helps others see love between themselves. When her foster dad starts a bookmobile, she finds a way to connect people. Sweet story! #TheLittleVilaggeofBookLovers #NinaGeorge #July2023 #BallatineBooks
Wonderful feel good read. Will be perfect for summer. I actually enjoyed this more than Littke Paris Bookshop. The characters felt more developed and I appreciated this plot live more than those in the first book.
While I was excited to read this book based on the description and author, I didn't enjoy it as much as, The Little Paris Bookshop.
If you’ve ever read Nina George’s The Little Paris Bookshop, you’re going to want to preorder this book! The main character in The Little Paris Bookshop, Perdu, had an all-time favorite (fictional) book, & Nina George wrote THAT book - we can now experience what Perdu was so obsessed with!!!
Marie-Jeanne is a young girl in the countryside of France in the 1960’s & can see glowing spots on people - when they connect with glowing spots on others that means that they’re meant to be together. Marie-Jeanne joins the family business, which is a revolutionary mobile library - her foster father delivers books in his truck & Marie-Jeanne does the same but on horseback (very The Giver of Stars or The Book Woman of Troublesome Creek, but French). She eventually decides that she needs to help these people with connecting glow spots find each other, & the way to do that is through books - and maybe somewhere along the way she’ll be able to find her own true love.
I will say that this book may be a little hard to get into (maybe it has to do with the translation, who knows?) with the format of Love being an actual character watching over Marie-Jeanne, but the further I got into it the more it grew on me. I love the idea that books can be medicine for the soul, & that they can bring people together. The character development & influence that Marie-Jeanne has on the people in her village is beautiful.
Thank you to NetGalley & Ballantine in exchange for an honest review.
I received a free e-arc of this book through Netgalley.
I adore books about book shops and bookmobiles. This book has a bit of fantasy and reminded me a little of the Pixar movie "Inside Out" with Love, Fate, Death, etc. being characters in portions of the book. I thought it was creative and different. I had to be in the right mood to read about it, but I enjoyed it overall.
This book is a companion book to "The Little Paris Bookstore, "which I haven't read but this book. can be read on its own. This is a parable laden book full of poetic descriptions and discussions about fate and love but the actual plot is a little thin. Marie-Jeanne was just a small baby when her caretaker, her grandmother was visited by death. Death, like Love and Fate are actual characters in the novel and "Love" is the main narrator. Marie-Jeanne was touched by love in a special way which allowed her to see lights in people, lights that indicated someone or something that was special to that person. We meet a number of characters is the small French village the girl lives in before her foster father Francis thinks of the idea of a traveling book store.
The mentioning of books is always a great thing but it seemed like people in these villages never heard of reading books especially the idea that women and young girls could read. Since the book is set in 1969, I found the idea that women didn't read, to be very odd; by the 1960's people had been reading for centuries. When these various, farmers, milk man, etc begin to read they immediately choose books by Thomas Mann and Franz Kafka which again seemed puzzling. During this time when Marie-Jeanne and her foster father are making deliveries, she notices many people have lights on their fingers or lips. Love tells us these are places where people will later find pleasure. Love also tells us twice that the light will never, ever appear on a person's backside. Why was this assertion necessary?
The majority of the novel is about match making; there seems to be many characters who are pining for their true love but refuse to leave their houses to find their person. Marie-Jeanne along with some other characters have to resort to some book club salons to force people to be in the same room with someone they are fated to find. I think not everyone will agree with the narrator's insisting that everyone has a true soul mate. There is one gay character in the book but she assures the readers she loves without lust and would never sleep in the same bed as her beloved. I don't know why this character was added to the book and then made to feel different from the others. I did enjoy the beautiful descriptions of the valleys of lavender fields, the wonderful dishes cooked by Elsa, and mentions of various books. I just wish the books would have been the main focus instead of soul mates. Thank you to NetGalley for a copy of this book and to the publisher for granting my wish for an early read of this ARC in exchange for a review.
I loved The Little Paris Bookshop and recommended it to our library book club in 2016 (although I liked it more the first time I read it than the second). I know that Nina George is a famous author (although I didn’t know how well regarded she was before reading About the Author at the end of the book).
Evidently The Little Village of Book Lover is (a bit of) a prequel to The Little Paris Bookshop. This wasn’t my favorite book. What really drove me (absolutely) crazy when reading The Little Village of Book Lovers was the (endless) adjectives. “a village where cats prowled the street that curled around the church and explored the vineyards and lush, flowering meadows, the olive groves, lavender fields and tree nurseries.” “longed for something more picturesque, more dramatic, more sentimental. They ate well; slept for a long time; dreamed different, more intensive, more nonsensical, and more colorful dreams; …” This one was my favorite though, “… she huddled closer to the surf-white flank of the large, warm, breathing horse.” (Who knew … warm AND breathing?!?! Never would have guessed.)
I refuse to rate books that I don’t finish. It took me a while. I finished all 272 pages. I had expected more (well more than the repetition of “more” (see above) ).
Thank you to NetGalley for the opportunity to revive The Little Village of Book Lovers in exchange for an honest review. Thank you to Nina George and the publisher Ballantine Books. Publication Date is July 25, 2023.
This one just didn't work for me.
After thoroughly enjoying the Little Paris Book Shop by Nina George, I looked forward to her latest. This novel reads somewhat like a translated parable. Told from the point of view of Love, who sometimes refers to such characters such as Fate and Chaos as well as the old olive tree, the story centers around Marie-Jeanne and her adopted parents Francis and Elsa and their lives in rural France. After a slow start, the tale gathers momentum when Francis starts a traveling library and many in the community and environs become book enthusiasts. The relationships that grow from the devotion to reading are sweet, if somewhat predictable. For bibliophiles willing to take time for the abstractions narrated by Love, this may be a rewarding effort.
This book made me feel happy, sad, hopeful, and inspired. It reminded me of why I love reading and how books can be a source of comfort and joy. It also made me want to visit France and see the places that Jean Perdu visited! This book is a gem and I highly recommend it to anyone who loves books!
Thank you NetGalley for providing me with an ebook ARC!