![]() ![]() Our hotel is just blocks from some of the best things to do and see in the city, including the Anchorage Museum at Rasmuson Centre, the vibrant 5th Avenue Mall, and the Alaska Centre for the Performing Arts, making it perfect for the cosmopolitan traveller. Break a sweat in our 24-hour fitness facility, with its sweeping views of downtown Anchorage, or treat yourself to a massage or facial at the full-service Ice Spa, located right here within the hotel. Our intuitively designed guest rooms feature everything you need to relax, refresh, and feel at home - including room service, a 42-inch flat-screen TV, a refrigerator, and high speed Internet access. Our hotel is just moments away from the city's best restaurants, museums, shopping, and attractions, yet also offers easy access to the stunningly beautiful wilderness for which Alaska is known. And in a multiverse of infinite choice and infinite possibility, I'm just not sure that the answer matters enough.Sheraton Anchorage Hotel & Spa welcomes you to discover our beautiful Alaska accommodation, delicious dining, and an unparalleled location in the heart of downtown Anchorage, Alaska. The only question left hanging over all of it is which one she'll finally choose. Enough of a theoretical portion of an infinity that she feels as though she has seen them all by the time we're closing on the final pages. The story, then, forms solely around the lives she passes briefly through, the choices and their consequences. ![]() ![]() He gives her a tree, and though there are many branches, it is still just a tree. Ultimately, Haig gives Nora (and those of us following along with her) a straightforward path from suicide to closure, from regret to acceptance. And a character who doesn't actively want something - even when it is something so basic as to keep on living - is a hard character to identify with. Or maybe she does, but the arc of the plot hinges on her trying to figure out what exactly it is. what sucks a measure of the color and life from 'The Midnight Library' is that Nora, as a character, doesn't really want anything.īut what sucks a measure of the color and life from The Midnight Library is that Nora, as a character, doesn't really want anything. After meeting another "slider" (as those who can bounce around between multiverse possibilities are called), and discussing the pop-science implications of a multi-dimensional existence, Nora muses on her situation: A simplicity to the narrative that has to be taken as a choice on Haig's part, not an accident. When she finds herself excited again about living, things calm down.Īnd there's a deliberateness to it all. When Nora loses hope, the library starts to collapse. Infinite possibility, sure, but only one shot at each of them. Infinite options, yes, but maybe not an infinite amount of time in which to choose. Elm's job is to present everything to Nora very clearly and to lay out the stakes very directly. The Midnight Library is unusual in that it follows a plot with no twists, no turns that don't feel like a gentle glide. Haig presents all of this as a straight line. 'The Midnight Library' is unusual in that it follows a plot with no twists, no turns that don't feel like a gentle glide.īut here's the problem. ![]()
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