Critique
This is a critique on The Black Book of Secrets. As I began reading the book my first impression was that this was a darker, creepier book than I had read before. The first paragraphs made me interested to what would happen to Ludow. The story is a mystery and an adventure.
To me this feels like a completely different type of book than I usually read. It is darker. The writing style is straightforward, dark, and eerie. I think that the setting for the tale fits the story perfectly: a small town with very different types of people who have strange ways and do different kind of jobs. The dialogue and the conflict were weird but they worked together.
The ending of this story is happy because Ludow becomes Joe’s apprentice and they travel around together. It is a believable ending but, in reality, it wouldn’t happen that perfectly. The ending is a good one because you want Ludow to be successful and find happiness. The right things happen to make that kind of happiness possible for him.
I connect to the story because Ludow and I are the same age. I liked the ending the best because all the characters introduced throughout the story are happy, their debts are paid off, they don’t have to work for someone anymore, or they get to be somebody’s apprentice.
The author was very good at explaining everything and providing such detail as to make it believable.
What I dislike about the story is how Ludow has a bad life at the beginning. But of course without that, we would have no story. The weaknesses of the book are not enough action parts. The beginning is strong but the end is weak. Another one of its weaknesses is how long the middle of the book is. You could explain something in 5 pages but it takes ten, which is good if you love details, but I like to have the story go on.
What I have learned from this story is how good I have it, how some people’s lives were horrible. From this story what I will remember most is the Grave-Digger’s confession of how he snatched bodies for the man to whom he owed money to get the debt lowered by 1 shilling. I will remember that because it was the creepiest of all of the stories.