This book was AMAZING! I loved it! This is one of the books that I judged by its cover only; I've never even read the back cover and I'm glad I didn't: I just let the story draw me in.
The prologue instantly hooked me, drawing me into the story with its first wonderful paragraph:
It should have been darker than the darkest night, as black as Indian ink. But it was not. He held his hand in front of his face and could clearly distinguish its outline in the feeble light. It was both a blessing and a curse. If he could see, then he could also be seen.
This opening paragraph brought forth a feeling excitement and raised questions within me. I felt immensely compelled to read on!
The story progresses in short, imagine-filled chapters, filled with many characters, most of them with extremely cool names, such as Adolphus Spute, Ambrosius Blenk, Dirk Tot, the Rainbow Rebellion, and my favorite, Mumchance. Mike Wilks, the author, must have had a great time inventing theses names.
I really, really liked the concept of this book; it was great and took my imagination on a roller-coaster ride of whopping proportions. Shifty traders in the marketplace would fool their customers, giving them flour that was almost all sawdust and watered wine. People everywhere were getting tricked for paying lots of money for worthless items, and who was behind it all? A group of wickedly twisted shopkeepers. In the words of the character Dirk Tot, "There will always be men who only think in terms of profit, never in terms of value." To put a stop to all these wrong-doings in the marketplace, the honest merchants of the city of Nem got together and formed something called the Mysteries. I really liked this part. Anyway, they formed the Mysteries. The items a merchant would be trading would be carefully inspected by whichever Mystery the merchant was a member of. The shady shopkeepers and merchants soon all disappeared and everything went well for a while. But--and there is always a but--the system that was made to stop corruption...soon became corrupted itself.
And this is where the character with great artistic talent, Melkin Womper, comes in: he is born into a world with corrupt Mysteries, although he knows close to nothing of it because he lives in the country. But that quickly changes when he encounters a vile man, Adolphus Spute, and his whistle-tooting companion, Mumchance. They are part of the Fifth Mystery, the most-corrupt one out of the five, and they're convinced that Mel has stolen a Pleasure. The character, Mel, and the reader are left to figure out what 'Pleasures' are, and it is soon revealed. The five Mysteries are based on the five senses, but since they became corrupt, the idea of Pleasures were introduced. If a baker, being a member of the Mystery in charge of taste, wanted to bake a new kind of cake with chocolate icing, he would first need to save up enough money to buy that particular Pleasure. The concept of Pleasures within the five Mysteries became tyrannical and everyone was kept horribly poor. Almost no one could afford new Pleasures.
The man called Spute is convinced that Mel has stolen a Pleasure belonging to the Fifth Mystery, which has to do with sight, and therefor, art. And Mel a young artist, and by pinning some drawings up on his wall, he unwittingly stole a Pleasure: and Spute wants it back.
Dirk Tot, a friend of Mel's friend, whisks Mel away from the danger in the nick of time, and they travel to the great city of Vlam, where Mel gets an apprenticeship to a great artist, Ambrosius Blenk. There, he meets the rude, nasty Head Apprentice named Groot (another great name) and another apprentice named Ludo. Ludo and Mel become friends, and then a kitchen-girl named Wren joins them.
And together they unravel the mystery of the Mirroscape.
Let me repeat my earlier claim: this book is amazing. Here's why.
Mike Wilks had invented a wonderful concept of an art academy...with paintings...that let you enter a whole new world. The artist's world. That's right! Certain paintings have something called the Mirrormark, a symbol that will open the portal into the world of the painting! I instantly loved the idea. Beasts that artists' have created can come out of the Mirrorscape, as Mel, Wren and Ludo discover...but people can also go in. And get trapped.
The three friends discover a vile plot, led by Spute and Mumchance, to arrest Dirk Tot and trap the Master, Ambrosius Blenk, inside the Mirrorscape. Forever. So THEY--Spute and Mumchance--can eventually climb their way higher and higher...and eventually overthrow the Lord-High-Master, Lord Brool, and rule the entire Fifth Mystery!
The three friends journey inside the dangerous world of the Mirrorscape to rescue Blenk, facing many dangers, such as getting buried alive by only one solider and stabbed to death by giant paintings that came to life at the hand of a drunken traitor. And more dangers than just those two! What will happen? Read this fantastic book to find out!
I LOVED this book, the concept was fantastic, the characters were great, and the descriptions of people and landscapes were utterly amazing! While I was reading this book, I was also writing a story of my own, and kept using the word 'clambered'. I knew I had to find another word to use, but my mind was blank. I REALLY like writing, and what was fun that, after a long day of schoolwork and writing my own story, I could sit down and read someone else's story for an hour or two. It was definitely great and...refreshing to read all the wonderful descriptions in Milk Wilk's Mirrorscape book; I think he is a genius. A very hard thing for writers to do is paint a picture in their readers minds and I think that Mike Wilks has most certainly done that, using the best words at the right moments to paint a wonderful picture in his readers' mind as his characters, Mel, Wren and Ludo, journey forth to fulfill their destiny inside a painter's painting, which hangs upon a wall in a room in an academy in a city in the wonderfully and incredibly well-thought out world that Mike Wilks has created. I can't wait to get my hands on the second book!
Mike Wilks, I applaud you.