Peter S. Beagle is always interesting and never quite conventional. This book starts out with the titular Innkeeper’s Song, providing us with the entire plot condensed into a folk song, and then proceeds to elaborate in first-person chapters from different viewpoints. It does so beautifully, and it’s never predictable, and yet, I never felt really close to the plot. I’ve felt this way about all books by Beagle so far, though, and I still like them.
There are a lot of individually cool things about this story! They just failed to grip me. Also, idk how necessary the whole gender-pretend-group-sex scene was.
Quotes
How nice to hear the most ridiculous statement of my entire life while I am still young enough to appreciate it.
Related books
The Last Unicorn
by Peter S. Beagle Β· published 1968 Β· read 2017-02-23The Princess Bride
by William Goldman Β· published 1973 Β· read 2018-02-28