totallyshelfaware's Reviews (1.07k)


Amulet has been on my to-read list for a very, very long time. After getting nowhere with [b:The Umbrella Academy|2795053|The Umbrella Academy, Vol. 1 Apocalypse Suite|Gerard Way|https://d202m5krfqbpi5.cloudfront.net/books/1327877097s/2795053.jpg|2820826] and [b:I Kill Giants|6435893|I Kill Giants|Joe Kelly|https://d202m5krfqbpi5.cloudfront.net/books/1356121155s/6435893.jpg|6625451] (I always find that I can’t finish a book every time I put it on my Goodreads currently reading shelf), I was desperate. So I picked it up, with high hopes and a nice comfy cushion, trusting in all the outstanding reviews I had come across on Goodreads.

Boy, was I disappointed. A lot of reviews compared this to [b:Bone|92143|Bone|Jeff Smith|https://d202m5krfqbpi5.cloudfront.net/books/1283755678s/92143.jpg|88871], and while I can see similarities here and there, the fact of the matter is: Bone is an all-ages book — everybody who reads it should will like it. That isn’t the case with Amulet. True, it’s got breathtaking illustrations, but that isn’t all a graphic novel is. You need something to back the art.

If I was ten/eleven, I’d love it. It would be my favourite-est book of all time (granted, “all time” is very short when you’re that age), but I struggled through this. What made this series unbearable for me was knowing that there was a time I would have enjoyed and raved about it for the next few years. I get the feeling that I’m being a little harsh, but I’m upset with the fact that I had to try so hard to love it – to think like a twelve-year old – and it still didn’t do anything for me. You shouldn’t have to try. See, with Bone, it’s effortless. [a:Jeff Smith|5951|Jeff Smith|https://d202m5krfqbpi5.cloudfront.net/authors/1239071106p2/5951.jpg] takes a story we’re sort-of familiar with, and he still manages to make it work. [a:Kazu Kibuishi|27372|Kazu Kibuishi|https://d202m5krfqbpi5.cloudfront.net/authors/1311988001p2/27372.jpg] falls short, just a tiny bit.

And you know how I feel about spoilers? Well, for the first time ever, it won’t matter if I tell you what the book is about, because it doesn’t matter what age you are, you can see where this is going.

Family moves to Grandpa’s (haunted) estate/mansion/tower-y house thing. Goes on a cleaning spree. Girl finds library and mysterious book. Magical things happen, and she ends up with a stone. Monsters kidnap mother; Girl and Brother try to save her. On the way, a lot of self-discovery and various other clichéd fantasy plot points are highlighted – cruel king disappointed in son, son trying to do good, The Resistance, Super-Awesome-Ninja-Fox, ancient city situated in the clouds, all that stuff.

I constantly felt like he was insulting a child’s intelligence. I’ve grown up on a healthy diet of [a:Roald Dahl|4273|Roald Dahl|https://d202m5krfqbpi5.cloudfront.net/authors/1311554908p2/4273.jpg]’s work, and when I re-read them now (yes, I’m sentimental about these things), I can still connect to every word. Every single one. I’m twenty, and Dahl makes me feel like a twenty-year old reading a fun book. Twenty, not twelve.

I’ve read the first three volumes, and I’m not sure I want to continue. A part of me is curious to see if he turns the whole story around, and a part of me is past caring. As beautiful as the illustrations are, I’d rather find something that can give me pretty pictures with a backbone.

Final verdict: Anyone below the age of thirteen will love this. Apart from that, the artwork is the only selling point. Otherwise, I wouldn’t bother.


I'm not really sure where to put this. It's better than a three, not as good as a four, but not a 3.5 either.