That was what Sara liked best about Tamson House: that it didn’t seem to be a part of the world outside its walls. Stepping over its threshold was like stepping into a place where everything you knew had to be forgotten to make way for new rules.” pg 25
Moonheart is a story about magic, myth, and how one special house connects it all.

There are many characters in Moonheart, so many that I won’t list them here. But they are easy to keep up with in the story because they are so different.
For as old as this book is (published in 1984), I felt that it had a lot of modern urban fantasy elements to it. Charles de Lint could be considered as one of the creators of that genre.
His story goes from this world, to other worlds, and back again. I enjoyed it a lot.
“There is no such thing as chance in the workings of the world,” he replied, repeating something he’d told her the second time they’d met on the shore. pg 309
That being said, the plot drags in places. This is a book for readers with solid attention spans. I struggled a little to stay interested until the ending, which comes quickly. But once you’re in the ending, you race to finish the book- because it is that good.
Recommended for urban fantasy readers. Thanks for reading!
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