Helpful Score: 1
Ink and Bone is the first book in The Great Library series by Rachel Caine. It is 2025 in London. Everything is controlled by The Great Library. The Library is the keeper of knowledge, wisdom, and information. Jess Brightwell is the son of Callum Brightwell, a book dealer. Unfortunately, dealing in real, original books (hard covers with printed pages) is illegal. Jess is taught the business from a young age. He starts out as a runner where he delivers the illegal books to clients (and will be arrested if caught). The one thing Jess does love about the business is the books. He will read anything he can get his hands on (which means pilfering them from his father and hoping he does not notice). When Jess is sixteen, Callum buys him a placement in the Library training program. First Jess will have to pass a test and be accepted (which he passes with flying colors). Callum does have an ulterior motive, of course. Jess will be training in Alexandria where the Great Library is housed (other cities have satellite libraries). Callum will want Jess to acquire and deliver books. Jess is thrilled to get away (and hopes to find a way to avoid his father's demands). The training is difficult and rigorous. Not all the candidates will make it through the training program. Their teacher is Scholar Christopher Wolfe and he is not thrilled to be teaching a group of postulants (as the students are called). Scholar Wolfe has no intention of taking it easy on this group. One by one the students are dismissed. Then the final group has to go on a dangerous assignment to save books in a war zone. Who will make it back alive?
I enjoyed Ink and Bone for the most part. It is an interesting world (Rachel Caine came up with some unique things), and I liked the main character (especially his love of books and reading). There is a lot of action in the second half of the book (especially towards the end) which made it more interesting and gave the book a faster pace (better than the first part). Imagine a world where owning a real book (especially old, first edition books) made with paper and ink is illegal! The Library owns all originals and you can be arrested/jailed if caught with books (especially trading in them). There is violence and death in the book (if not for that it would more suited to young adults/tweens). I give Ink and Bone 4 out of 5 stars (I liked it). I will be reading the next book in the series to see what happens next (I admit that I am curious).
I received a complimentary copy of Ink and Bone from NetGalley in exchange for an honest evaluation of the book. The comments and opinions expressed are my own.
I enjoyed Ink and Bone for the most part. It is an interesting world (Rachel Caine came up with some unique things), and I liked the main character (especially his love of books and reading). There is a lot of action in the second half of the book (especially towards the end) which made it more interesting and gave the book a faster pace (better than the first part). Imagine a world where owning a real book (especially old, first edition books) made with paper and ink is illegal! The Library owns all originals and you can be arrested/jailed if caught with books (especially trading in them). There is violence and death in the book (if not for that it would more suited to young adults/tweens). I give Ink and Bone 4 out of 5 stars (I liked it). I will be reading the next book in the series to see what happens next (I admit that I am curious).
I received a complimentary copy of Ink and Bone from NetGalley in exchange for an honest evaluation of the book. The comments and opinions expressed are my own.
Lots of world building & character development in this first of a new series.
It took a while for me to get in to this one as I'm not really a fan of steampunk or alternate history kind of novels so that tends to be a bit more of a difficult read for me.
However, I think what rubbed me wrong the most was that this world that Rachel has envisioned truly terrifies me. While I've embraced both my Nook & Kindle, I do also still have much love for my dead tree books and would absolutely *hate* being dictated what I'm allowed to or not allowed to read.
Happy that this isn't necessarily a cliffhanger ending, but just a bit of a taste of more to come and I'm anxious to see more from both Jess & Morgan.
*Digital review copy provided by First to Read program.
It took a while for me to get in to this one as I'm not really a fan of steampunk or alternate history kind of novels so that tends to be a bit more of a difficult read for me.
However, I think what rubbed me wrong the most was that this world that Rachel has envisioned truly terrifies me. While I've embraced both my Nook & Kindle, I do also still have much love for my dead tree books and would absolutely *hate* being dictated what I'm allowed to or not allowed to read.
Happy that this isn't necessarily a cliffhanger ending, but just a bit of a taste of more to come and I'm anxious to see more from both Jess & Morgan.
*Digital review copy provided by First to Read program.
I got this series from the library and it is in the YA section, well I can see why it is YA
The writing is juvenile, and for me (which has nothing to do with the author) the print of the book is very small and very hard to read
I didn't get far and I realized it is probably more for the YA group that might be able to absorb a story about kids in a future world and although I do read a lot of YA books (before passing them along to family) I still have a very picky attitude of how a book is written and for me this one was just too much description about things I don't think kids know anything about and it sure didn't interest me enough to find out
The writing is juvenile, and for me (which has nothing to do with the author) the print of the book is very small and very hard to read
I didn't get far and I realized it is probably more for the YA group that might be able to absorb a story about kids in a future world and although I do read a lot of YA books (before passing them along to family) I still have a very picky attitude of how a book is written and for me this one was just too much description about things I don't think kids know anything about and it sure didn't interest me enough to find out