Carnivalesque
English
By (author): Neil Jordan
It looked like any other carnival, but of course it wasnt
It had its own little backstreets, its alleyways of hanging bulbs and ghost trains and Punch and Judy stands
And at the end of one he saw the Hall of Mirrors. There were looping strings of carnival lights leading towards it, and a large sign in mirrored glass reading Burleighs Amazing Hall of Mirrors and the sign reflected the lights in all sorts of magically distorted ways.
To Andy and his parents, it looks like any other carnival: creaking ghost train, rusty rollercoaster and circus performers. But of course it isnt.
Drawn to the hall of mirrors, Andy enters and is hypnotised by the many selves staring back at him. Sometime later, one of those selves walks out rejoins his parents leaving Andy trapped inside the glass, snatched from the tensions of his suburban home and transported to a world where the laws of gravity are meaningless and time performs acrobatic tricks.
And now an identical stranger inhabits Andys life, unsettling his mother with a curious blankness, as mysterious events start unfolding in their Irish coastal town
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