Miranda Reads's Reviews > Ink and Bone
Ink and Bone (The Great Library, #1)
by
Instead of books, everyone has blanks (think: ereader but run by alchemy and magic) where they can rent as many books as they want, respond to messages and conduct their lessons on.
But no one has a book - as in an actual printed book - because having one is punishable by death.
Jess Brightwell and his family are book-smugglers. They find printed copies of books and sell them to the highest bidder. And if they get caught - they will hang.
Jess father decides he wants an inside man. Someone who could have access to the handwritten texts of the greats and who could influence the right people to turn a blind eye.
And so, Jess is going to apply for one of the most dangerous, grueling and brutal jobs in the world. He's going to become a Librarian.
Anyone can be sent home at any time. And Jess is learning that the world isn't quite as stable as the Great Library wants them to think.
Jess is fairly confident he can make it...but the longer he stays, the more he realizes that he has no idea of how (or even if) he can ever get out.
What a brilliant start to a series!
It's so rare to get a YA series with a male lead - this entire book was a breath of fresh air. Jess was down-to-earth, entertaining and absolutely endearing. Watching his struggle as he transitions from a scared kid to a bold survivor definitely kept me hooked.
I'm also so impressed by Caine's world-building. She took such a fundamental concept (the printed word) and built a society around its absence.
I was thoroughly fascinated by how she just took this idea and ran with it (though, as a huge library lover, I did have a really difficult time associating anything negative with libraries).
Overall, I cannot wait to read what she writes next!
With thanks to Berkley Publishing for sending me a free copy in exchange for an honest review.
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by
"You have ink in your blood, boy, and no help for it. Books will never be just a business to you."Few people, if any, have ever set eyes on a book in Jess Brightwell's London. And yet, no one is illiterate and writing is considered sacred across the world.
Instead of books, everyone has blanks (think: ereader but run by alchemy and magic) where they can rent as many books as they want, respond to messages and conduct their lessons on.
But no one has a book - as in an actual printed book - because having one is punishable by death.
Jess Brightwell and his family are book-smugglers. They find printed copies of books and sell them to the highest bidder. And if they get caught - they will hang.
Jess father decides he wants an inside man. Someone who could have access to the handwritten texts of the greats and who could influence the right people to turn a blind eye.
And so, Jess is going to apply for one of the most dangerous, grueling and brutal jobs in the world. He's going to become a Librarian.
The Great Library of Alexandria has spread its tendrils in every major country. It promotes literacy while keeping the population in check.
"The first purpose of a librarian is to preserve and defend our books. Sometimes, that means dying for them - or making someone else die for them."
Jess and 30 other students from across the world compete for six librarian spots. Quickly, they realize that this will be no picnic.
"The Great Library may have once been a boon, but what is it today? What does it give us? It suppresses! It stifles!"
Anyone can be sent home at any time. And Jess is learning that the world isn't quite as stable as the Great Library wants them to think.
Jess is fairly confident he can make it...but the longer he stays, the more he realizes that he has no idea of how (or even if) he can ever get out.
What a brilliant start to a series!
It's so rare to get a YA series with a male lead - this entire book was a breath of fresh air. Jess was down-to-earth, entertaining and absolutely endearing. Watching his struggle as he transitions from a scared kid to a bold survivor definitely kept me hooked.
I'm also so impressed by Caine's world-building. She took such a fundamental concept (the printed word) and built a society around its absence.
I was thoroughly fascinated by how she just took this idea and ran with it (though, as a huge library lover, I did have a really difficult time associating anything negative with libraries).
Overall, I cannot wait to read what she writes next!
With thanks to Berkley Publishing for sending me a free copy in exchange for an honest review.
YouTube | Blog | Instagram | Twitter | Facebook | Snapchat @miranda_reads
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Reading Progress
April 21, 2018
– Shelved
May 1, 2018
–
Started Reading
June 15, 2018
–
Finished Reading
Comments Showing 1-26 of 26 (26 new)
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message 1:
by
Mackey
(new)
May 29, 2018 06:57AM
This has been on my "to read" list for too long. I NEED to read it now. Hope you enjoy it!
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Mackey wrote: "This has been on my "to read" list for too long. I NEED to read it now. Hope you enjoy it!"Definitely enjoyed it :)
Nisa wrote: "Great review, Miranda and sounds like an interesting story :))"It was pretty darn cool :)
I read this last year and it was pretty good. I read the 2nd one and I don't like the characters enough to continue. Hate the main romance. Jess is ok. I might continue it anyway though I'm not sure.
Alice wrote: "I read this last year and it was pretty good. I read the 2nd one and I don't like the characters enough to continue. Hate the main romance. Jess is ok. I might continue it anyway though I'm not sure."Sorry it did not appeal to you! I am curious to see how everything plays out, so I'm definitely going to check it out :)
Jennifer (Jen/The Tolkien Gal) wrote: "Awesome review! Definitely putting this on my 2018 TBR"Very cool :)
I started reading this before I got sick last winter and never finished it. I NEED to read it now! Great review Miranda.
Mackey wrote: "I started reading this before I got sick last winter and never finished it. I NEED to read it now! Great review Miranda."haha - totally! ! :)
Rusty wrote: "Great review Miranda !! Thanks for bringing this book to my attention . :D"Thanks and you're welcome :)
Bhavik wrote: "Awesome review!The book however still will remain on my TBR for years.
Got so many commitments xD"
Lol. I know the feeling
Great review, Miranda!!! This sounds like a really fresh plot and I'm intrigued!!! Going to add it to my to-read bookshelf :)
I hate that I'm in a reading slump and even though I really want to read this, I know I won't be doing it. ugh. Great review.
Julia wrote: "Great review, Miranda!!! This sounds like a really fresh plot and I'm intrigued!!! Going to add it to my to-read bookshelf :)"Thank you! I hope you enjoy it!
Lyn* Nomad *Worlds await* wrote: "I hate that I'm in a reading slump and even though I really want to read this, I know I won't be doing it. ugh. Great review."Awww :( hope you get out of your slump!
Lyn* Nomad *Worlds await* wrote: "@Miranda I'm re-reading one of my favorite series so that helps :)"that's pretty sweet :) Which series?
@Miranda The In Death series by J.D. Robb 😊😍😍😍 The first 5 books I've already read at least 3 times so I started my marathon from book 6. It'll be a long journey of 40 books or so lol
Lyn* Nomad *Worlds await* wrote: "@Miranda The In Death series by J.D. Robb 😊😍😍😍 The first 5 books I've already read at least 3 times so I started my marathon from book 6. It'll be a long journey of 40 books or so lol"Ohmygosh. I think this is one of my mom's fave series (she and I talk books all the time). Very cool :D
@Miranda Thanks! Yes, it's one of my all-time favorite series too 😊 That's awesome that you and you mom have reading in common. Sadly, in my family, I'm an endangered species - the only book dragon.
Lol. Then you become the mother of book dragons :)I've already started squirreling away books for my future-spawn :p they are going to LOVE reading (whether they want to or not :p)
Great review Miranda. Even though I’m too old for YA fiction by several decades, I’m intrigued by the concept and world-building around the absence of books. For me too, growing up, my local library was a wonderful place - I could never borrow enough books. I used my sister’s library ticket as well as my own (that may have been illegal?!)







