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From V. E. Schwab, the #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue: a new genre-defying novel about immortality and hunger.
This is a story about hunger.
1532. Santo Domingo de la Calzada.
A young girl grows up wild and wily—her beauty is only outmatched by her dreams of escape. But María knows she can only ever be a prize, or a pawn, in the games played by men. When an alluring stranger offers an alternate path, María makes a desperate choice. She vows to have no regrets.
This is a story about love.
1827. London.
A young woman lives an idyllic but cloistered life on her family's estate, until a moment of forbidden intimacy sees her shipped off to London. Charlotte's tender heart and seemingly impossible wishes are swept away by an invitation from a beautiful widow—but the price of freedom is higher than she could have imagined.
This is a story about rage.
2019. Boston.
College was supposed to be her chance to be someone new. That's why Alice moved halfway across the world, leaving her old life behind. But after an out-of-character one-night stand leaves her questioning her past, her present, and her future, Alice throws herself into the hunt for answers...and revenge.
This is a story about life—
how it ends, and how it starts.
I
Santo Domingo de la Calzada, Spain
1521
The widow arrives on a Wednesday.
María remembers, because Wednesdays are for bathing, and her hair takes an age to dry after it's been washed and combed. She remembers, because it is warm for the end of April, and she is sitting in a patch of sun at the edge of the yard, sucking on a cherry pit (one of the first of the season) and holding a lock up to the light to see if the hair is turning darker, or if it is simply still damp.
María's mother says she is becoming too vain, but then, her mother is the one who makes her go to bed each week with clay in her hair, hoping it will mute the glaring strands. As far as María can tell, it isn't working. If anything, the hair looks even brighter.
She would not mind so much, María's mother, if the hair were honey-colored, or earthy, even auburn, but such an angry shade of red, she says, is a bad omen. Not a warm color, but the hot orange of an open flame. One she cannot seem to douse.
...
This is an epic, ambitious novel about confronting one's worst self, one's loneliness, and one's rage at the unfairness of life—and while I struggled to find a rhythm with its structure and balance of characters, it shines in its unapologetic female leads, its historical settings, and its captivating, if somewhat theatrical, prose style...continued
Full Review
(718 words)
(Reviewed by Frankie Martinez).
Author V.E. Schwab is known for bestselling fantasy novels like Vicious (2013), in which college roommates study the darker side of gaining superpowers, A Darker Shade of Magic (2015), where a smuggler's deal goes awry while they travel through parallel worlds, and The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue (2020), in which an immortal woman is cursed to be forgotten by everyone she meets. After publishing her first few novels, Schwab came out to her audience as gay in her late twenties, a process that she wrote about for O's "Coming Out" series in October 2020. She wrote that she felt pressure to come out when she started writing more explicitly queer characters and having readers question her characters' authenticity; and in turn, coming out ...

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There is no such thing as a moral or immoral book. Books are either well written or badly written. That is all.
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