Reader Score
73%
73% of readers
recommend this book
Critic Reviews
Good
Based on 6 reviews on
"Rarely is a first novel as smart and engaging and learned and funny and moving as The Borrower." --Richard Russo, author of Pulitzer Prize-winning Empire Falls
Lucy Hull, a children's librarian in Hannibal, Missouri, finds herself both kidnapper and kidnapped when her favorite patron, ten-year-old Ian Drake, runs away from home. Ian needs Lucy's help to smuggle books past his overbearing mother, who has enrolled Ian in weekly antigay classes. Desperate to save him from the Drakes, Lucy allows herself to be hijacked by Ian when she finds him camped out in the library after hours, and the odd pair embarks on a crazy road trip. But is it just Ian who is running away? And should Lucy be trying to save a boy from his own parents?
SVP & Publisher at Flatiron Books, formerly of Ecco and Riverhead. She/her. Opinions are my own.
I lost THE BORROWER by @rebeccamakkai in a beauty contest years ago to a fancier, more established editor, and it is still seared into my memory. Nice to see it mentioned here! https://twitter.com/hels/status/1504444115483770885
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Check out 3 audiobooks our team is loving: 🎧 The House in the Cerulean Sea, a fantasy about found family 🎧 @rebeccamakkai's funny and moving story, The Borrower 🎧 @Rumaan's thrilling novel, Leave the World Behind https://t.co/c0cKCeTu0U https://t.co/MTyJrbHHkv
Book reviews @BookBrowse, @ForewordReviews, @TheTLS, @WasafiriMag and more. Assoc. ed. of @BookmarksMag. Freelance proofreader and book blogger. American in UK.
Exciting 2023 #bookpost from @katyaellis_ @FleetReads @LittleBrownUK . I'm a big fan of Rebecca Makkai's The Borrower and The Hundred-Year House, and intrigued to hear that she "reinvents herself" with this suspenseful campus novel. Out 23 February. https://t.co/I4Zl48UFJN
"An appealing, nonromantic love story about an unexpected pairing--and a surprisingly moving one."--The New York Times
"This comical and touching book strikes a nice balance between literary artistry and gripping storytelling, and offers a contemporary take on the classic "journey of discovery."...Right up to the book's satisfying and well-plotted ending, Makkai shows us that even though the stories we are told as children are often fount to betray us as mere fantasy, there might still be some wisdom in the one of their most common and simple morals: Be true to yourself."--The Daily Beast, Selected as one of "3 Must Read Novels"
"Rebecca Makkai's The Borrower is full of books, libraries, cross-country hijinks, accidental parenting, love gone wrong and friendships gone right. Makkai will have you cheering for her librarian heroine, who has all the history and darkness of a Russian novel in her veins, mixed with the humor and spirit of Bridget Jones. A fun, moving, and delightful read."--Hannah Tinti, author of The Good Thief
"In the hilariously off-kilter world Makkai creates, it makes perfect sense that 26-year-old children's librarian Lucy Hull and her favorite reading-obsessed patron, 10-year-old Ian Drake, should 'kidnap' each other and take a loopy road trip. Clever riffs on classic kid lit pepper the sparkling prose, making this first novel a captivating read."--Parade Magazine
"How could any reader of any age resist Rebecca Makkai's charming The Borrower, a novel that tracks the relationship between a 20-something librarian and a 10-year-old boy with punitive parents. Part caper (the two take off on a road trip that has moments of danger but never turns dark), part coming-of-age (and not just for the kid!) story, it manages, with good humor and wry self-knowledge, to read our minds."--O, Oprah Magazine
"A lively, lovely read that delicately weaves together social activism, literary culture and the quintessential road trip motif into a single solid adventure tale...Reading The Borrower is like taking a blissfully nostalgic journey into the bookshelves of American childhood."--WSJ.com
"A wise and likable tale about the difficulty of protecting a precocious imagination."--The Wall Street Journal
"Poignant...every conflicted word Lucy utters in Makkai's probing novel reminds us that literature matters because it helps us discover ourselves while exploring the worlds of others."--The Chicago Tribune