Summary and Reviews of The Capital of Dreams by Heather O'Neill

The Capital of Dreams by Heather O'Neill

The Capital of Dreams

A Novel

by Heather O'Neill
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  • Critics' Consensus (6):
  • First Published:
  • Jan 7, 2025, 368 pages
  • Reviewed by BookBrowse Book Reviewed by:
    Pei Chen
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About This Book

Book Summary

From the hugely acclaimed author beloved by literary lights, including Emily St. John Mandel, Kelly Link, and Mona Awad, a dark dystopian fairytale about an idyllic country ravaged by war—and a girl torn between safety and loyalty.

Sofia Bottom lives in Elysia, a small country forgotten by Europe. But inside its borders, the old myths of trees that come alive and faeries who live among their roots have given way to an explosion of the arts and the consolations of philosophy. From the clarinetists to the cabaret singers, no artist is as revered as Sofia's brilliant mother, the writer Clara Bottom. How can fourteen-year-old Sofia, with her tin ear and enduring love of ancient myths, ever hope to win her mother's love?

When the country's greatest enemy invades, and the Capital is under threat, Clara turns to her daughter to smuggle her new manuscript to safety on the last train evacuating children from the city. But when the train draws to a suspicious halt in the middle of a forest, Sofia is forced to run for her life and loses her mother's most prized possession. Frightened and alone in a country at war, Sofia must find a way to reclaim what she has lost. On an epic journey through woods and razed towns, colliding with soldiers, survivors, and other lost children, Sofia must make the choice between kindness and her own survival.

In this stunning novel set in an imaginative world yet reflective of our own times, Heather O'Neill delivers a vivid, breathtaking dark fairytale of life, death, and betrayal.

Excerpt
The Capital of Dreams by Heather O'Neill

Sofia followed the tracks. She was so nervous. It was strange to be lost. She didn't think she had ever been lost in her whole life. She knew the city streets so well, it was impossible to get disoriented there. There were also maps on the corners of each block. They were behind glass on the walls outside subway stations. You could always stop and look and see exactly where you were. How she wished she could come across one of those maps now and stand on tippy-toes to look at it.

She turned around quickly because she felt as though she was being followed. The trees stiffened in place, like a child playing a game of freeze tag. The trees would start moving again as soon as Sofia turned her back. The sound of the stones underneath her shoes started getting louder and louder. Her footfalls sounded like a train leaving the station.

There was whispering in the air. It was like bits of conversation had been ripped from the mouths of the children ...

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Reviews

BookBrowse Review

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In The Capital of Dreams, Heather O'Neill unpacks meaty themes around identity and coming-of-age; mother-daughter relationships; and war, occupation, and genocide. Sofia is a child at the beginning of the war and feels every bit like one, eager to grow up and be part of the adults' resistance efforts. She views being sent away from her mother's clique as a mark of her immaturity, but this only hastens her growth as she faces decisions on her own. She learns independence, comes to understand her values and priorities as she deals with tradeoffs between survival and loyalty, and has her first interactions with sex as she meets her old friend Celeste, who has been taken into sexual slavery by enemy soldiers. Sofia's very presence becomes a mark of resistance in a genocide that seeks to wipe all of Elysian culture, language, and population from the face of the Earth...continued

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(Reviewed by Pei Chen).

Media Reviews

The Literary Review of Canada
A refined but dark fairy tale...A harrowing and all too timely account.

The Quill and Quire (starred review)
Magical and brutal, haunting and searing...Against the harsh backdrop of war, O'Neill elegantly tackles intimate, complex questions about maternal devotion, freedom, individuality, creativity, and sexuality.

Booklist (starred review)
O'Neill presents a dark fairy tale set in a tiny European country, Elysia, which renounces its pantheistic, forest-dwelling ways to build a thriving artistic culture centered in the Capital... . . Like the heroines of her favorite folktales, Sofia navigates her own adolescence along with the treacherous landscape, emerging from the woods with a hard-won sense of self. O'Neill's feminist fairy tale will appeal to fans of Kelly Link and Karen Russell, [and] Sofia's coming-of-age fairy tale will [also] resonate with teens.

Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
The novel is told in fairy tale cadence and peppered with sophisticated animals, sensitive objects, and the enduring magic of folklore forests; its raw power lies in the way it blends the realities of war with the equally trenchant realities of its child narrator's perspective as she navigates her suddenly irredeemable world...A powerful novel—heartbreaking, magical, and real.

Publishers Weekly (starred review)
O'Neill masterfully blends moments of whimsy with the grim realities of war, exploring themes of art, loyalty, and the complexities of mother-daughter relationships. The lush prose and fantastical elements draw readers into a magical and heartbreaking world. Like the best fairy tales, the result feels both timeless and painfully relevant.

Author Blurb Cherie Dimaline, bestselling author of Empire of Wild and VenCo
Uncommonly poetic, nuanced and insightful, The Capital of Dreams is a masterpiece of the tangled threads and beating hearts that make us both ordinarily human and extraordinarily magical. I wish every girl could replace her mirror with pages of O'Neill's work, to see herself as a fierce and lusty creature well-placed to weave new worlds. The Capital of Dreams will make you grateful you wandered up a dark path and tumbled down a rabbit hole.

Author Blurb Iain Reid, bestselling author of We Spread and Foe
The Capital of Dreams is not so much a novel to read but one to live (and dream) in. A dark, wistfully comic fable that's as imaginative as it is poignant. An entire world that only Heather O'Neill could create.

Author Blurb Maria Adelmann, author of How to Be Eaten
Heather O'Neill's The Capital of Dreams is a feminist adventure with all of the darkness of a war novel, the charm of a fairy tale, and the heart of a coming of age story. O'Neill's crystal-clear, aphoristic prose reveals complex themes about freedom, desire, and destiny. I underlined passages with one hand and turned pages with the other, rapt right through the stunning final twist.

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Beyond the Book



The Work of Heather O'Neill

Portrait photo of Heather O'Neill, seated and leaning forward with chin on hand Novelist, essayist, and contributor to NPR's This American Life, Heather O'Neill is a literary powerhouse in Canada, where she was born and raised and lives today. Her debut novel Lullabies for Little Criminals was published first in the US (Harper Perennial, 2006) before going on to win notable Canadian literary awards Canada Reads and the Hugh MacLennan Prize for Fiction, as well as being shortlisted for several international awards, including the Orange Prize for Fiction and the Governor General's Award. Her 2022 novel When We Lost Our Heads was a bestseller and finalist for the Grand Prix du Livre de Montréal.

O'Neill speaks openly now about her difficult childhood in Montreal — her mother decided she wanted to be...

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