![]() ![]() Together, they are to retrieve a rare book of fairy tales and bring it back to the Library before it can fall into the wrong hands. Furthermore, Irene is given a new assistant, a mysterious young man named Kai. This time, her superiors are sending her off to an alternate London where magic and steampunkish technologies dominate. However, no sooner had she reported in than she is given a new mission. When the book opens, Irene is just returning home to the Library, having completed her latest assignment in the field and looking forward to some time off. Our protagonist is Irene, a junior librarian agent. Oh, this book has libraries, all right-interdimensional libraries, established across multiple worlds, all interconnected and run by a secret society of librarian spies! Collectively, this network is known as the Invisible Library, and their members are tasked with the utmost important mission: to procure and archive important works of fiction from all of the different realities, for the purposes of preservation and research. Well, Genevieve Cogman’s The Invisible Library does one even better. ![]() After all, what could be better for an avid bookworm, than being immersed in a story about a place filled with books, books, and more books? Speaking as someone who loves to read, I just can’t help but get these warm fuzzy feelings for books about libraries. ![]() The Invisible Library by Genevieve Cogman Book Review: The Invisible Library by Genevieve CogmanĪ review copy was provided by the publisher in exchange for an honest review. ![]()
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