Emma's Reviews > Howl’s Moving Castle

Howl’s Moving Castle by Diana Wynne Jones
Rate this book
Clear rating

by
75857
's review

it was amazing

Before Hayao Miyazaki made "Howl's Moving Castle" into a feature length animated film in 2006 (2004 if you saw it in Japan), it was a book written by Diana Wynne Jones in 1986. Due to the inherent difficulties of creating an animated film, Miyazaki greatly abridged and adjusted the plot of the novel for his movie. I happened to enjoy both film and novel but after reading the book I realized that the plot is extremely different in the novel--enough that the book and movie become completely different viewing experiences.

Anyway, that's all I'm going to say about the movie. On to the discussion of the book:

Sophie lives "in the land of Ingary, where such things as seven-league boots and cloaks of invisibility exist." In other words, all of the traditional fairy tale stories are real. Not so bad, except that Sophie Hatter is the eldest of three sisters, which everyone knows means Sophie is doomed to failure should she ever set out to seek her fortunes. Sophie is resigned to her fate--living obscurely, and less than successfully, working in the family hat shop. Except that this is not a traditional fairy tale and events soon intervene to set Sophie on a very unexpected course indeed for an eldest daughter.

It all starts in the hat shop after some interesting things begin to happen when Sophie talks to the hats she trims. Interesting enough to attract the attention of the dangerous Witch of the Waste. When her encounter with the Witch of the Waste leaves Sophie cursed in the body of an old woman, she has no choice but to go out and seek her fortune in hopes of breaking the curse (even if she is an eldest daughter).

Along the way, Sophie comes upon a mysterious moving castle that has taken up in the hill's of Ingary. The castle belongs to Wizard Howl "who was known to amuse himselv by collection young girls and sucking the souls from them. Or some people said he ate their hearts." Either way, he was not anyone Sophie expected to ever meet let alone move in with. Until she does. Adventure ensues as Sophie tries to break the curse and help Howl with his own uniquely magical problems.

In terms of fantasy novels, "Howl's Moving Castle" is one of my favorites. The world Jones creates is fully realized without ever getting boring or limiting the reader's imagination. The tone of her narrative is also spot on. Readers of Jane Austen's novels or the "Sorcery and Cecelia" series will notice a similar narrative voice. Although this novel is largely timeless, the prose has a charmingly Victorian tone--taking its time to arrive at the action, the better to familiarize readers with the characters involved and show the readers just how fantastic they (and the story) really are.

I also adore this story because it is romantic, thrilling, and completely absorbing. Even at 329 pages, the novel is far too short. Happily, Diana Wynne Jones follows up "Howl's Moving Castle" with "Castle in the Air" (1990) and a brand new book featuring Sophie and Howl ("House of Many Ways") is due out in May of 2008.

You can find this review and more on my blog Miss Print
92 likes · flag

Sign into Goodreads to see if any of your friends have read Howl’s Moving Castle.
Sign In »

Reading Progress

Started Reading
January 1, 2007 – Finished Reading
May 18, 2007 – Shelved

Comments Showing 1-6 of 6 (6 new)

dateDown arrow    newest »

message 1: by Kimberly (new)

Kimberly i love this movie by hayoa miyazaki, i own ALL of his movies, including howl's moving castle, which i love! even though i have not read the book yet...


Christine Schulze I agree; many of Jones' books, but this one in particular, is too short indeed! The film and book do greatly vary, but both are richly done and can definitely be appreciated as separate works. I am glad you enjoyed this book as thoroughly as I! Please consider stopping by my page sometime, as my own works have been compared to writers like Jones and you may find something that interests you there. In the meantime, thanks for giving a favorite book of mine a stunning review!


Sidney I was told that when Hayoa Miyazaki went to Jones to get permission to do the movie, She was excited and decided to rewright the story just for him. That's why they are so different. I'm not sure if this is just rumor or fact.
I love them anyway, but the BOOK is my Favorite :D


Emma @Sidney: I hope it is true. How brilliant!


هاي كورة لاين This was such an enchanting story!


Laurie Wright the movie takes you to a whole other world. the book is wonderful. but the movie Just transports me to another world for exploring Califer might be interesting in the book but he's even better in the movie... I'm glad I saw the movie first.


back to top