Cover Image: The Motion of Puppets

The Motion of Puppets

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Member Reviews

Keith Donohue has crafted a clever and haunting novel, putting a horror-tinged lens on the myth of Orpheus and Eurydice. The puppet world was an absolutely stunning work of imagination. If I had to classify it, it would probably be something like literary horror/darker fantasy/surreal love thriller. Recommended for readers who like twists on mythology or not-too-terrifying horror stories.

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Thank you NetGalley for the ARC! I do not like puppets. This story solidifies my dislike for them. A creepy tale about a group who reanimates people into the bodies of puppets; a woman who becomes a puppet, and her husband who is out to find (and hopefully rescue) her.

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This is a good book to recommend for fans of slow-burn suspense, with just a hint of unsettling creepiness.

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This was a case of "not for me", though I hope others can find it enjoyable.

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Dolls/puppets have always creeped me out. I got the shivers just typing that. When a wife disappears and turns out to be a puppet, had a husband getting into the deep parts of a city trying to find her.. and/or the truth.

I found the writing style a little off kilter for my taste. I think I was expecting more of a horror feel and instead got a more mystifying mystery with a tinge of horror element. I do love me a good mystery and the author brings this part into a well played part with twists. Had I went into this book strictly thinking of a mystery/thriller type feel I think I would be rating it differently. Since I expected a more horror-ish atmosphere, I was a bit disappointed.

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I was venturing blind into new territory here. I was not familiar with author Keith Donohue and I was not sure what genre of story this was going to be, though I suspected (by the cover, mostly) it would be dark fantasy/horror. But it's more than that, and not that at all. It's a sad, mysterious romance against a darkly magical backdrop.

Kay and Theo are newlyweds who have just moved to Quebec. Theo is a translator, currently translating the life story of photographer Eadward Muybridge. Kay had been an acrobat, in Quebec, and shortly after moving back, she visits the old theatre where she once worked. But one night she does not return home. Leaving the theatre she was followed and she ducked into the Quatre Mains ... a toy shop that never appears to be open. There she is taken by the shop owner and turned in to a puppet.

Theo is beside himself with worry for his bride and scours the city looking for her, checking the most obvious place - the theatre - first. Without much luck, Theo goes to the local police to report Kay missing. Theo, of course, is the prime suspect in Kay's disappearance.

While Theo loses himself with fear and longing for Kay, Kay loses herself in the world of the puppets. She has identified herself as one of the many puppets. She has a faint memory of her life before, but she doesn't long for it. All of the puppets have a sad complacency about them, setting a troubled undercurrent of mood about the book.

I enjoyed Donohue's writing. He has a remarkable knack for mood and tone. He can place the reader into a location and give us a real sense of what everyone is feeling. And this is what kept me going. I could feel Theo's sense of urgency and his losing control, and I could feel Kay's confused complacency.

But what I couldn't feel was a purpose. I stayed with the book because of the language, hoping it would take me somewhere, and I enjoyed the journey, but when it was done, I was left unsatisfied.

I will definitely be curious to read some of Donohue's other works and hope that, instead of retelling an old story (you'll see many other reviews refer to this as a retelling of the Orpheus and Eurydice myth), he'll give us something completely new.

Looking for a good book? The Motion of Puppets by Keith Donohue is a mesmerizing story - a retelling of the Orpheus and Eurydice myth - that doesn't quite satisfy.

I received a digital copy of this book from the publisher, through Netgalley, in exchange for an honest review.

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This book was magically delicious. It was a really different book than what I was used to, but I'm so glad that I read it. Now I'm looking for more books by this author. So if you're a fan of magical realism you should definitely give this beautiful written book a chance.

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A fascinating and lovely story.

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I purchased this one for the library for the Keith Donogue fans, but didn't actually find it scary.

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Well developed characters and clever plot. May not be for every reader.

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What a wonderful book is The Motion of Puppets written by Keith Donohue!

While I was reading this book I tried to guess the books this author had previously read for writing such a touching book. Profound, plenty of meanings The Motion of Puppets can be "read" and you will see by yourself at many levels.

First of all: let's ask to ourselves who a puppet is, apart of course to be a beautiful toy. It's an inanimate toy in general maneuvered by someone else who will give him life.

A puppet is driven by someone else to do and to be exactly what he wants and what he desires that this puppet must be: the owner of the puppet can changes his/her clothes, he can changes hair, he can changes everything of this puppet. Read it in metaphorical sense and you will obtain also what it can happens to a weak person.

The puppet couldn't never say anything, because he/she wouldn't have force to do that, no mouth, or to be someone listened by the society.
The force of a puppet raises only in this: who there is behind him/her.

There is someone more strong than the same puppet able to give him/her dignity, strength, value, and all the sentiments she/he will perform that night during the show.

The puppeteer.

This book can also be read socially. A society of many puppets, driven by the desire of gratification, driven by the desire of being all similar to our neighbors, without to search for our own differences. We should all have similar thoughts and we should all stay calm and quiet. The book according to my point of view can be also read like it. And trust me when I tell you that I am not wrong.

The part of the book in which for example a puppet, Noe, the most intolerant one to be and live like a puppet needs a certain "operation" to its head for removing some bees entered for case while they were re-building the puppet during the reconstruction read by me like a sort of "revolution".

She couldn't hear anymore all that noise and she needed to open her brain, but opening her brain what does it mean? Thinking with our own head and saying what we think.

The puppet, as told by the other puppets should have kept all her/his thoughts in her/his head because in opposite case what can happens to the world and to the society if these thoughts go out? Well, I found the passage pretty interesting.

Surely Donohue has read the Metamorphosis by Kafka and while I read that the puppets loved to performed The Trial by Franz Kafka I smiled thinking that in this case we were anyway in a Metamorphosis and change. A sort of Wizard of Oz by Baum but without to find characters as happens in Baum's book that asks for specific treats of their characters, but differently people transformed for the purpose of re-creating the reality and plasticity that can be found just by the old remembrance of people realistically alive once.

Are, these puppets sad? As said before: no. Most of them don't love to remember who they were and they don't remember who they were in some cases. In other cases they remembered but they don't mind anymore. Just few puppets would want to go away, refusing to be, as in the society, many sheep or many puppets.

For Kay Harper new, happy married girl with her wonderful husband Theo it happened while she was staying with her husband to Quebec for performing with a circus. Kay is an acrobat and this occasion succulent.

She loves the magical atmosphere of a circus and she loves mainly to spend her free time with her beloved husband. Theo is a translator and he is spending his time at the moment with a translation from a book written by Muybridge, This man dead more than a century ago interested at the motion of human and not only, bodies.

Their life is happy like can be the life of a romantic new couple. Theo in love for Kay so badly although of course he still needs to discover some aspect of her character, and vice-versa. Their love very powerful and quick, they became groom and bride without to think too much.

Kay is powerfully attracted by a toy shop located at rue Saint-Paul. In particular she is attracted by an ancient puppet. Oh: she loves to look at that one with the desire of buying it, and she confess all to her husband. But...What to do?

This shop is systematically closed. Possible that no one can be seen or spotted somewhere close to it? Upsetting.

One night Kay enters in the shop and starts Theo's story and at the same time Kay's sweet and terrible own metamorphosis.

Can be considered a death the departure by a dimension in this case of a person, so with a human body to a puppet? Of course it is. It's a transformation, a metamorphosis. There is an end and a new beginning.
Death and re-born under another semblance that just the ones loved that person a lot can recognize in a new shape.

There is life also in a puppet after all. In a common puppet. A puppet can be considered alive. They're appreciated, loved, treated well. Just this give them a reason for being "alive" for us all.
In this case you will discover how happy are the puppets of this book when no one can see them.


Again we find a big devotion and love: the one of Theo for her Kay! that I loved so much for the wonderful expressions and phrases of love expressed in the book. Such tenderness from a man is terribly moving.

Theo is destroyed when he understand that Kay can't be found anywhere and she is missing. No one knows where she went after with some colleagues left the restaurant after a good evening spent all together. No one knows if she knew anyone in the city. Theo excludes every possible other men, other stories, friends where she could have stayed in the city or the return to their city. No, impossible.

Kay becomes a phantom and Theo, destroyed, returns to NYC where he re-starts to work as a professor. But he is strained, absent, he talks with the guys of the publishing house. He can't complete the translation so soon as hoped because with the mind is somewhere else. At the publishing house they understand and give more time to him.
His colleague are distant. No one wants to talk to him. His tragedy mustn't effect other people. Students joke with it: "Sure that he didn't kill her?" "Who knows..."

Prof.Mitchell a devoted man and teacher of Greek and Latin, a man of few words, starts to be his friend and later Egon another member of the cast of the circus, reaches his friend telling him that he slept in the bedroom upside the toy shop where Kay disappeared and he bring him very good news. That shop wasn't normal, that shop was weird. A cursed place, animated. The return to Quebec, the discovery of some new puppets in Vermont, (the second departure for Kay...) the call with the mom of Kay. "I recognized my daughter Theo...On TV. Please, that one is Kay I am sure of it. Please help me..."

The three men all motivated will leave for this farm where are now located these puppets, but what will happen will be poetically sad but also powerful.

Meeting someone you thought you had lost forever, discovering the great simplicity of getting lost and transformed by the circumstances. It's simple to lose your self and at the same time to be transformed or killed metaphorically.

I won't reveal you the end of the book but I can tell you something: what Theo knows for sure is that a man won't never stop to love the woman he loved so baldy although someone changed him in many ways, because love can reach her under many aspects and shapes.
The end is impressively beauty. And it teaches us the strength of love, able to fight also when the impossible become possible, the surreal become only the language you can speak and recognize.

I was to my favorite city bar when I picked up this title months ago. It was my idea to read this book and write my review for the book launch but the illness and death of my dad changed the cards on the table of Life.

What I thought for sure when I requested this book was this: if it is written well it is a masterpiece.
I wasn't wrong!

This one is a masterpiece.

The cover is powerful. There is Kay, transformed in a puppet and waiting to be moved by someone else more big than her. There is behind her a big farm with a light. The light of the night, able to give life to lifeless puppets during the day and new hopes and some hours of freedom from their immobility. Most people can find attracting that light but that attractive light would mean also danger if a human wants to stop by in a wrong moment?

What can I add more?

That I hope someone will create a movie from this book as beautiful as this book is.

You can be sure: The Motion of Puppets has a great story and great message. I love this book so badly and I want to thank NetGalley and the publishing house for this dream.

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