



But I love this trilogy just as much as I did the very first time I read it. YouTube | Blog | Instagram | Twitter | Facebook | Snapchat might be nostalgia talking. It kind of felt a bit too long and there were parts that dragged.īut, the author did such a good job with the Inkheart that I will read anything involving the Inkworld. The sequel didn't entrance me in the same way as the first book. Slowly, one-by-one, the characters find ways to disappear into the heart of the Inkworld - will they ever surface? And if they could, would they even want to? She has to find a way in, if only so she can look. Maggie has her mother back but all she can think of is that inky, wondrous world - of the adventures and mayhem, the beauties and the beasties, and the glory and the magic. Dustfinger spent twenty years in the real world with only a burning desire to go home. That's how Maggie lost her mother, all those years ago, and how Dustfinger was ripped from its pages. When they read aloud, things in the book become so entranced by their voices that quite often characters will follow the sound into in the real world. Maggie and her father (Mo) have a unique gift. The Inkworld: Mesmerizing, Deadly, Unforgettable This book shows the reality of dream lands. The third novel, Inkdeath, was published on Septemin Germany. The first novel, Inkheart (2003), was critically acclaimed and was made into a major motion picture released in January 2009. Inkspell is the second novel in Cornelia Funke's Inkheart trilogy. Tintenblut = Inkspell (Inkworld, #2), Cornelia Funke
