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THE BOOK THAT WOULDN’T BURN by Mark Lawrence Kirkus Star

THE BOOK THAT WOULDN’T BURN

by Mark Lawrence

Pub Date: May 9th, 2023
ISBN: 9780593437919
Publisher: Ace/Berkley

An aspiring librarian and a young man trapped in her library attempt to unravel its mysteries in this tightly paced fantasy.

Livira came to Crath City as a refugee after sabbers—wolf-men who prey on humans—destroyed the tiny desert village she called home. In a stroke of good fortune, the city’s internal bureaucracy sends her to train at its vast library. Lawrence’s young and uneducated protagonist quickly finds her feet, gaining literacy at a frenetic pace, but soon realizes she may not be cut out to follow all the library’s rules. Meanwhile, in a distant corner of the same library, a young man grapples with his weighty relationship to the cavernous building that acts as his prison. Over several generations, five children disappeared inside the library’s Mechanism, a well-guarded mystery structure that can bring any book to life. Years later, the Mechanism spat Evar and his four “siblings” out together, un-aged, into a world in which they may now be the last of their kind—and though they’ve left the Mechanism, they still can’t leave the library. Each child emerged with a particular skill set honed by the book they happened to be carrying at the time of their disappearance. All except for Evar, that is. Where the others returned with advanced knowledge in combat, subterfuge, and the humanities, “Evar had emerged with nothing, just the sense that something had been torn from his memory, leaving a chasm so wide he could fall into it and never be found.” More than 10 years after his return, a full-grown Evar sets out to track down the mystery woman he lost in the Mechanism, who now exists only as a gap in his memories. In his search, he crosses paths with Livira, who becomes preoccupied with his mission herself. What follows is a madcap adventure full of political intrigue, time travel, philosophy, and romance. Lawrence works with many threads here, but none feels misused or insufficiently explored. Rather, the author unspools them masterfully, leaving behind a tightly woven tapestry that readers will ache to see finished even if they can predict one or two of the tale’s myriad twists and turns.

Gripping, earnest, and impeccably plotted.