A review by chalkletters
The Toymakers by Robert Dinsdale

tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

2.75

A year ago (give or take), I went to A&E with an agonising case of gallstones, the complicated result of which was that I spent seven weeks in hospital — including one in Intensive Care — and a further several weeks recuperating with my dad. I read a few books in hospital (when I wasn't falling asleep several times a page), but obviously didn't have the set-up to write reviews. Once I was back out in the big wide world, I just... stopped reading for a bit. I was doing other things: writing loads, watching TV with Dad, getting back into the rhythm of work and choir. This is my attempt to bring back an old habit, in perhaps a slightly different way.

The Toymakers (a gift from Rebecca) was a book of three thirds, or maybe just a very defined beginning, middle and end. Robert Dinsdale opens on the story of an enchanted toy shop and the people who work there. Beneath exceptional cosy Christmas vibes are character dramas to draw the reader deeper into the world. These aren't ground-breaking, but the sibling relationship between Kaspar and Emil was particularly juicy. (It evoked the same kind of tension as the sisters in Roses & Rot.)

The outbreak of war makes an abrupt and devastating interruption just at the point you might think Robert Dinsdale might be wrapping up with a happy ending. For a while, it felt like he'd started a completely different story (albeit with the same characters) and it wasn't immediately obvious why the two needed to be presented together. How or if this would ever tie back into the narrative at the beginning of the book was left in doubt for an uncomfortably long time.

Once Kaspar returned, it became more obvious what these disparate ideas had to do with each other. The Toymakersspans a much greater historical period (1906 to 1953) than is obvious from the very close-focused beginning. The Toymakers was one complete experience, but it certainly didn't always feel like it.

That's three paragraphs on the structure of the book and very little about writing style or character, but maybe it will do as a first foray back into the role of reviewer.

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