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The Bright Sword Book Review: The Arthurian Novel I Didn't Know I Was Waiting For
The Bright Sword Book Review: Lev Grossman already proved with The Magicians trilogy that he could take beloved fantasy tropes and make them feel dangerous and real and emotionally devastating. Now he's done it to King Arthur, and the result is extraordinary.

Luke Stoffel
2 min read


American Gods Book Review: Neil Gaiman Drove Across America with Every God Who Ever Lived
American Gods Book Review: Neil Gaiman asked a question that nobody else thought to ask: what happens to the gods when nobody believes in them anymore? The answer, it turns out, is they get jobs. They drive taxis. They run funeral homes. They hustle and con and drink and try to remember what it felt like to matter. And one of them is assembling an army.

Luke Stoffel
2 min read


Strange the Dreamer Book Review: The Most Beautiful Prose I've Read in YA Fantasy
Lazlo Strange is a librarian who dreams of a lost city whose name was stolen from the minds of everyone who ever knew it. He calls it Weep, because that's all anyone can say when they try to remember. And from that single image — a city-shaped hole in the world's memory — Laini Taylor builds something breathtaking. Book Review

Luke Stoffel
2 min read
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