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Go to My LibraryInkheart (Movie Cover)
- Language
- English
- Published in
- Publisher
- Scholastic Paperbacks
- Pages
- 576
- ISBN
- 9780545046268
Now, after nine years of hiding, a mysterious fire-eater from that same book appears, bringing a warning that Capricorn and his henchmen are hunting for Mo to exploit his power for their own dark designs. Forced to flee, Meggie and her father are plunged into a desperate adventure where the lines between fiction and reality blur. They must confront the escaped villain and protect the story that holds the key to their past. The book itself becomes their greatest hope and their most terrifying enemy, forcing them to navigate a world where the magic of reading could change their lives forever or destroy them completely.
Subjects
Original edition details
Other editions (62)
Inkheart (Turtleback School & Library Binding Edition)
2005 • Turtleback Books
English
The Literacy Bridge - Large Print - Inkheart
2005 • Thorndike Press
English
Tintenherz. Limitierte Sonderausgabe. 16 CDs
2007 • Jumbo Neue Medien + Verla
German
Tintenherz CD 13 - 16
2003 • JUMBO, Neue Medien und Verlag
German
tintenherz (German Edition)
2003 • Cecilie Dressler Verlag
German
Other editions

Inkheart (Turtleback School & Library Binding Edition)
2005 • Turtleback Books
English

The Literacy Bridge - Large Print - Inkheart
2005 • Thorndike Press
English

Tintenherz. Limitierte Sonderausgabe. 16 CDs
2007 • Jumbo Neue Medien + Verla
German

Tintenherz CD 13 - 16
2003 • JUMBO, Neue Medien und Verlag
German

tintenherz (German Edition)
2003 • Cecilie Dressler Verlag
German

Inkheart by Cornelia Funke (Hardcover)
2003 • Chicken House/Scholastic
English

Hart van ink
2009 • Malan Media
Afrikaans

Sang d'encre
2010 • Gallimard jeunesse
French

Inkheart (Inkheart Trilogy, Book 1) (Inkworld series)
2011 • Scholastic Inc.
English

"Inkheart Film Tie-In ; Inkworld v.1"
2008 • Chicken House
English

Inkheart
2009 • Scholastic, Incorporated
English

Corazón de tinta
2008 • Fondo de cultura economica
Spanish

Inkheart
2006 • Scholastic Inc
English

Tinta-bihotz
2009 • Elkar
Basque

Coracao de Tinta (Em Portugues do Brasil)
2009 • Companhia Das Letras
Portuguese

Coeur d'encre
2018 • Editions Gallimard
French

Cor de tinta
2005 • RBA, La Magrana
Catalan

Coeur d'encre
2006 • Hachette Jeunesse
French

Inkheart
2009 • n/a
English

Inkheart
2020 • Chicken House
English

Inkheart
2004 • Gardners Books
English

Sang d'encre
2009 • Gallimard jeunesse
French

Inkheart
2003 • Chicken House
English

Corazón de Tinta
2008 • Siruela
Spanish

Coeur d'encre
2009 • Gallimard jeunesse
French

Inkheart
2005 • Listening Library
English

Coeur d'encre
2004 • Hachette Jeunesse
French

Cuore d'inchiostro
2007 • Mondadori
Italian

Tintenherz
2010 • Oetinger Taschenbuch GmbH
German

Tintenherz (Jubilaumsausgabe)
2013 • Dressler Cecilie
German

Inkheart (Inkheart Trilogy)
2005 • Perfection Learning
English

Inkheart
2004 • Listening Library
English
![Чернильное сердце [роман-фэнтези]](https://images.isbndb.com/covers/20867443484106.jpg)
Чернильное сердце [роман-фэнтези]
2012 • Махаон
Russian

Inkheart
2006 • Thorndike Pr
English

Inkheart - Coração de Tinta (Inkheart, #1)
2021 • Editorial Presença
Portuguese

Inkheart (Inkheart Trilogy)
2005 • Scholastic Paperbacks
English

Inkheart: Library Edition (Inkheart Trilogy)
2006 • Random House
English

Corazón de Tinta
2022 • Siruela
Spanish

Cuore d'inchiostro
2005 • Mondadori
Italian

Corazón De Tinta
2009 • Scholastic
Spanish

Čornylʹnyj svit: Kn. 1. : Čornylʹne serce / per. z nimecʹkoi͏̈ Oleksy Lohvynenka
2009 • Vyd. Teza
Ukrainian

Corazón de tinta
2006 • Siruela
Spanish

Tintenherz (Tintenwelt, #1)
2008 • Dressler
German

Inkheart
2011 • Chicken House
English

Inkheart
2004 • Scholastic
English

Inkheart
2003 • Listening Library (Audio)
English

Blekkhjerte
2009 • Cappelen Damm
languages.nob

Inkheart
2012 • The Chicken House
English

Inkheart
2011 • The Chicken House
English

Corazón de tinta
2009 • Siruela
Spanish

Inimă de cerneală
2007 • Trei
Romanian

Corazón de Tinta
2015 • Siruela
Spanish

Mürekkep Yürek
2000 • Akil Çelen Kitaplar
Turkish

Rašalo širdis
2008 • Alma Littera
Lithuanian

Мастилено сърце
2023 • Ерове
Bulgarian

Inkheart
2003 • The Chicken House
English

Atramentowe serce
2006 • Egmont
Polish

Cor de tinta
2008 • RBA
Catalan

Inkheart
2003 • Chicken House
English

Inkheart
2003 • Listening Library
English

Coeur d'encre
2010 • Gallimard jeunesse
French

Hart van inkt
2012 • Querido Kinderboek
Dutch
That night, listening at the door of Mo's workshop, Meggie heard whispered words of pursuit and danger. She heard the name of a man, Capricorn, spoken as if it might scorch the tongue. By dawn, Mo was packing their bags. “We have to leave,” he said, his voice strained, offering a thin story about visiting a great-aunt named Elinor. But Meggie knew they were fleeing. At the gate to their drive, Dustfinger was waiting. He had a scarred face, a strange, sad smile, and a horned marten named Gwin who traveled in his rucksack. He would not be left behind. “You still owe me, don't you?” he asked Mo, and with a heavy heart, her father let him into their van. As they drove south, away from the only home she knew, Dustfinger painted a portrait of Capricorn in chilling words. He was a man who found pleasure in terror, a man who would feed a bird to a cat just to watch it die, a man who wanted something Mo possessed - a book.
They found refuge in a house that was more library than home, a fortress of paper and ink belonging to Elinor, an aunt whose love for books far surpassed her patience for children. Here, Mo revealed what he had been hiding: a book bound in silvery green linen, its title page carefully removed. It was called *Inkheart*. Meggie was allowed only a glimpse, but in that moment, she saw an illustration of an animal perched on a capital letter, an animal with tiny horns, just like Gwin. Before she could ask more, Mo entrusted the book to Elinor, who hid it in a secret compartment behind a row of other volumes. That night, as Dustfinger breathed fire into the darkness of the garden, Capricorn's men came. They were dressed in black, with faces like birds of prey. “Where's the book?” one of them rasped, his voice like a cat's tongue. Mo, believing his daughter was in danger, gave it to them and agreed to go with them, his face a mask of grim resolve.
Meggie was left alone with Elinor, her world shattered. But Dustfinger, who had vanished during the raid, returned the next day. He claimed to know the location of Capricorn's village and offered to lead them there. Though Elinor's distrust was a palpable thing, they had no other choice. They drove south again, this time into the barren, snake-infested hills of the Italian coast, to a village so forgotten it had no name. There, the trap was sprung. Dustfinger had betrayed them. “Bring the girl and the book, I said,” Capricorn told him, his voice as heavy and dark as his ink-black heart. Meggie had been the price for Dustfinger's hope of returning home.
Imprisoned with her father and Elinor in a dusty shed, Meggie finally learned the whole truth. Nine years ago, while reading aloud from *Inkheart* to her mother, Mo's rare gift had revealed itself in its full, terrible power. His voice, a thing of magic he called Silvertongue, had not only painted pictures in the air but had pulled living, breathing characters from the story: Capricorn, his knife-happy lieutenant Basta, and the fire-eater, Dustfinger. But the book had demanded a price for what it gave up. In their place, it had taken Mo's wife, Meggie's mother, swallowing her into its pages along with their two cats. Ever since, Mo had never read a single word aloud, terrified of what his voice might do.
Now, in a church with walls painted the color of blood, Capricorn forced Mo to display his talent. With Meggie held hostage by Basta's knife, Mo read. From *Treasure Island*, gold coins rained down, clinking on the stone floor. From *The Arabian Nights*, a boy named Farid appeared, torn from his own tale and lost in theirs. Pleased, Capricorn revealed his true plan. He had spent years hunting down and burning every other copy of *Inkheart*, saving only one. He had no desire to return to that world of fairies and mud. Instead, he wanted Mo to read out an old friend, a creature of ash and whispers known only as the Shadow, to serve as his ultimate executioner.
The first to feel the Shadow's wrath were to be Dustfinger and a maid named Resa, both condemned for treachery. As they dangled in nets from the church ceiling, Meggie looked up and saw the woman's face. It was her mother, read out of the book years ago by another, less-skilled reader, and left mute by the flawed magic. But before Capricorn's plan could unfold, Dustfinger helped them all escape, a desperate act of penance. They fled into the hills, surviving a close pursuit by Basta, and eventually found their way to the home of a man named Fenoglio - the author of *Inkheart*. When he learned his characters were alive, he was first incredulous, then horrified to hear what they had become. But most terrible was the secret he revealed to Dustfinger: in the final pages of the book, the fire-eater dies.
Recaptured by Basta and taken back to Capricorn's village, Meggie discovered her own inheritance. While trying to comfort herself by reading *Peter Pan*, her voice, like her father's, plucked a character from the page. Tinker Bell, small and bright as a splinter of light, appeared in her room. Fenoglio, imprisoned with her, realized they had a chance. He devised a plan, scrawling new words on a single sheet of paper, words to change the story's ending. During the execution, as Mo and Farid created a diversion by setting fire to Capricorn's house, Meggie stood on a rostrum before the assembled men, the book open on her lap.
With Fenoglio's new words hidden between the pages, she began to read. As the Shadow rose from the ground, a faceless thing of ash and dread, her voice gave it new purpose. Instead of obeying its old master, it remembered the pain of those from whose ashes it was made. It turned on Capricorn. In that moment, Mo appeared at Meggie's side, and together, their two voices read the final, fatal lines. Capricorn died, and his men, born only of ink and paper, vanished like smoke. In the chaos, Fenoglio himself was read into the book, a final, unexpected exchange.
In the aftermath, the village was filled with the strange, magical creatures Fenoglio's words had released from the Shadow's form. Meggie was reunited with her mother, her voice still lost but her presence a miracle. Dustfinger, heartbroken but free, stole the last copy of *Inkheart* and disappeared with Farid, still chasing the ghost of a way home. Meggie, Mo, and Resa returned to Elinor's house, along with a menagerie of fairies, trolls, and glass men. The library shelves were empty, but the house was full of life. There, surrounded by the quiet rustle of wings and the whispers of books waiting to be healed, Meggie began to write, determined to learn the magic of words for herself, to build worlds not of dread, but of hope.
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Rating Sources
Reviewers widely praise this book as a magical and imaginative tale, often described as "pure magic" and an "extraordinary" adventure. Many appreciate its deep love for books and reading, with numerous quotes resonating with book enthusiasts and the story itself feeling like a tribute to the power of the written word. The main characters, particularly the bond between Meggie and her father, Mo, are frequently highlighted as heartwarming and well-developed, with even supporting characters adding a unique charm. The writing style is often commended for its smooth flow and poetic quality, creating a captivating experience that keeps readers engrossed. The inclusion of quotes at the beginning of each chapter is also a beloved feature. Overall, many readers found it a highly recommended and unforgettable fantasy read.
Despite its strengths, several reviewers found the book to be excessively long and slow-paced, with some struggling to finish due to a perceived lack of significant action in the early chapters. Concerns were raised about the writing style, which some described as stilted or anachronistic, possibly due to translation. Character development was a point of contention for some, who felt they didn't truly connect with the protagonists or found Meggie's behavior occasionally annoying. A common criticism was the repetitive emphasis on the characters' love for books, which some felt became overdone and self-congratulatory. Additionally, aspects of the plot were described as lacking intrigue or feeling repetitive, with some finding the villains unconvincing or the overall execution falling short of the promising premise.
Ultimately, this book presents a captivating and unique premise centered around the profound connection between readers and the stories they cherish. While its execution draws mixed opinions regarding pacing and certain character elements, its imaginative world and heartfelt ode to literature resonate strongly with many. It is highly recommended for young adult readers and adults who appreciate fantasy, particularly those who deeply love books and storytelling and are willing to immerse themselves in a lengthy narrative. Readers who enjoy a magical journey and are patient with slower narrative builds are likely to find this a rewarding experience.
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