Science Fiction & Fantasy
- Publisher : Knopf Books for Young Readers
- Published : 04 Apr 2023
- Pages : 496
- ISBN-10 : 0593481658
- ISBN-13 : 9780593481653
- Language : English
Silver in the Bone
INSTANT #1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • From the critically acclaimed author of Lore comes a stunning new Arthurian fantasy-the tale of a teenage girl who seeks her destiny in the cursed ruins of Avalon, driven by love, revenge, and pure adrenaline!
"Simmering with magic, peril, romance, and heartbreak."-Leigh Bardugo, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Shadow and Bone
Born without a trace of magic, Tamsin Lark is no match for the sorceresses and Hollowers who populate the magical underground of Boston. But when the only parent she's ever known disappears without so much as a goodbye, she has no choice but to join in their cutthroat pursuit of enchanted relics to keep herself-and her brother, Cabell-alive.
Ten years later, rumors are swirling that her guardian found a powerful ring from Arthurian legend just before he vanished. A run-in with her rival Emrys ignites Tamsin's hope that the ring could free Cabell from a curse that threatens both of them. But they aren't the only ones who covet the ring.
As word spreads, greedy Hollowers start circling, and many would kill to have it for themselves. While Emrys is the last person Tamsin would choose to partner with, she needs all the help she can get to edge out her competitors in the race for the ring. Together, they dive headfirst into a vipers' nest of dark magic, exposing a deadly secret with the power to awaken ghosts of the past and shatter her last hope of saving her brother. . . .
"Simmering with magic, peril, romance, and heartbreak."-Leigh Bardugo, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Shadow and Bone
Born without a trace of magic, Tamsin Lark is no match for the sorceresses and Hollowers who populate the magical underground of Boston. But when the only parent she's ever known disappears without so much as a goodbye, she has no choice but to join in their cutthroat pursuit of enchanted relics to keep herself-and her brother, Cabell-alive.
Ten years later, rumors are swirling that her guardian found a powerful ring from Arthurian legend just before he vanished. A run-in with her rival Emrys ignites Tamsin's hope that the ring could free Cabell from a curse that threatens both of them. But they aren't the only ones who covet the ring.
As word spreads, greedy Hollowers start circling, and many would kill to have it for themselves. While Emrys is the last person Tamsin would choose to partner with, she needs all the help she can get to edge out her competitors in the race for the ring. Together, they dive headfirst into a vipers' nest of dark magic, exposing a deadly secret with the power to awaken ghosts of the past and shatter her last hope of saving her brother. . . .
Editorial Reviews
"Simmering with magic, peril, romance, and heartbreak. Bracken's stories plunge you into a world of legend and longing you will never want to leave."-Leigh Bardugo, #1 New York Times bestselling author of the Grishaverse series
"Nail-biting, gut-wrenching, action-packed, and devastatingly romantic, Silver in the Bone is absolutely legendary." -Jennifer Lynn Barnes, #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Inheritance Games
"An exquisite fantasy, crackling with dark magic.Silver in the Boneis a heart pounding must-read perfect for anyone who has ever wanted to step inside of a myth." -Stephanie Garber, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Caraval
"Bracken's writing is so sensuous and intoxicating, it will haunt readers even in their dreams." -Elizabeth Lim, New York Times bestselling author of Six Crimson Cranes
"A harrowing and heart-rending adventure about finding the courage to not be controlled by fear." -J. Elle, New York Times bestselling author of Wings of Ebony
"Magical and epic, pull up your chair to the Round Table for this adrenaline-filled adventure." -B&N Reads
"Perfect for fans that enjoy crossovers between fairytales/fables with modern times." -Bookstr
"Breakneck pacing and complex world building." -BookPage
"Balances horror and heartbreak with humor and tenderness. Heady romance blooms between Tam and Emrys, but it's pessimistic Tam's rewarding journey toward hope, trust, and self-acceptance that serves as the story's heart." -Publisher...
"Nail-biting, gut-wrenching, action-packed, and devastatingly romantic, Silver in the Bone is absolutely legendary." -Jennifer Lynn Barnes, #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Inheritance Games
"An exquisite fantasy, crackling with dark magic.Silver in the Boneis a heart pounding must-read perfect for anyone who has ever wanted to step inside of a myth." -Stephanie Garber, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Caraval
"Bracken's writing is so sensuous and intoxicating, it will haunt readers even in their dreams." -Elizabeth Lim, New York Times bestselling author of Six Crimson Cranes
"A harrowing and heart-rending adventure about finding the courage to not be controlled by fear." -J. Elle, New York Times bestselling author of Wings of Ebony
"Magical and epic, pull up your chair to the Round Table for this adrenaline-filled adventure." -B&N Reads
"Perfect for fans that enjoy crossovers between fairytales/fables with modern times." -Bookstr
"Breakneck pacing and complex world building." -BookPage
"Balances horror and heartbreak with humor and tenderness. Heady romance blooms between Tam and Emrys, but it's pessimistic Tam's rewarding journey toward hope, trust, and self-acceptance that serves as the story's heart." -Publisher...
Readers Top Reviews
ArtichokesForAll
Even though I am a big fan of fantasy, this is the first time I have read anything by this author. It’s obvious that I have been missing out. This is a great story that has its origins in the legend of King Arthur. It is really well-written, exciting, and just very enjoyable to read. Five stars.
Samantha H.Artich
Tamsin Lark is a Hollower, a glorified thief of magical items, often auctioned off to the highest bidder. The only problem is that she’s wholly mortal, no magic at all, not even a bit of the One Vision to be able to detect when magic is near. Nevertheless, after their foster father disappeared, Tamsin and her brother have to follow in his treacherous footsteps to insure their own survival. When rumors start swirling that a long-lost object with the power to break curses might have surfaced, it’s a race to see if Tamsin can beat her rival, Emrys, and the rest of the Hollowers to the finish line – and break her brother’s curse once and for all. This book was a rocky read for me. The initial worldbuilding was somehow a mixture of way too much exposition and also a total lack of clarity as to what was actually going on. Things settled a bit when the characters got to [SPOILER], but then a whole new backstory was revealed that I never really understood – though at that point I was so invested that I went right along with it. I love Arthurian folklore, but am definitely less familiar with it than I am with Greek mythology and your classic fairytales, so a good portion of this story might have made more sense if I knew the inspiration/source material better – but then again, worldbuilding is the foundation of fantasy and it just wasn’t executed as highly as I would have wanted it to be. That being said, once the story got going, it just kept rolling, and I had a really hard time putting it down. The characters are annoyingly frustrating in their flaws, but that just makes them all the more real and Bracken had me FEELING for them. I’m a sucker for enemies-to-lovers, and even though I knew it was coming, it still managed to sweep me away. “Choose me, because I choose you” had me positively BAWLING on my couch, and the little details of setting and humanity included had me hurting in the best way. The last few chapters are an absolute rollercoaster of twist after turn after revelation and I turned the last (e-)page in absolute disbelief. So, if you’re not good with cliffhangers, most definitely wait to pick this one up until the sequel is closer to releasing at some point next year. Content warning: brutal violence, descriptive gore, blood, massacre & death, parental abandonment, physical abuse (off-page, discussed by characters), death of a guardian. *Special thanks to the publisher and NetGalley for providing an e-arc in exchange for a fair and honest review!*
Karissa EckertSam
Series Info/Source: This is the first book in the Silver in the Bone series. I got a copy of this book to review through NetGalley. Thoughts: Previous to reading this book I have read many other books by Braken. I have enjoyed most of them but never really really loved them. I enjoyed "Brightly Woven", the 1st book in The Darkest Minds series, and "Lore"; I did not enjoy the later Darkest Minds novel. So, in summary Bracken is a bit hit or miss for me...this book followed in the same vein as those. This was okay, I like the darker twist to Arthurian mythology and the relic hunting but for some reason this wasn't the most engaging story for me. The story follows Tamsin Lark and her brother Cabell. They are raised as Hollowers, those who populate the magical underground in the modern world and make a living hunting enchanted relics. The story starts with us hearing about an enchanted relic they need to hunt but then we are quickly transported to Avalon to hunt down a ring from Arthurian mythology. The world-building is a bit thin and I never quite understood how the whole multiple worlds thing worked. There were things I enjoyed in the story and things I didn't. I really loved the beginning and enjoyed the treasure hunting aspect and the curses and adventure. Unfortunately, that quickly ended up in the background for a lot of the story. We quickly moved from relic hunting to a dark and cursed Avalon where our characters get forced into helping ancient Arthurian mythology figures. I didn't really enjoy the transition or the direction the plot took once they got to Avalon. It was like an Arthurian zombie apocalypse or something. The characters were okay but I didn't love them, they just felt like they were missing something. Tamsin is so focused on how "bad" she's been that she gets in her own way. Her enemy-to-lovers, love interest isn't much better. All of these characters are supposed to be tortured and complex but come off as a bit stiff and shallow. The romance felt awkward and Tamsin's relationship with the others around her wasn't much better. I read this and finished it and even enjoyed some of it. However, it was also very easy for me to put the book down and walk away from it. The writing style didn't really suck me in. When I was done I didn't want to read the next book but instead thought, "okay well onto something else". I really think this could have been an amazing book if the story had continued to focus more on relic hunting rather than Arthurian politics. The whole plunge into Arthurian mythology felt really forced. My Summary (3.5/5): Overall I read this and it was okay, I even enjoyed some aspects of the story, but I didn't love it. I am coming to the conclusion that Bracken just might not be an author I want to keep reading. I am always excited to read her books and en...
StephB302StephB30
This book was full of twist and turns and is a spring must-read. Can’t wait for a book number two.
Short Excerpt Teaser
SEVEN YEARS AGO
Lancashire, England
The first thing you learned on the job as a Hollower was to never trust your eyes.
Nash, of course, had a different way of saying it: All sorcery is half illusion. The other half, unfortunately, was blood-soaked terror.
In that moment, though, I wasn't scared. I was as angry as a spitting cat.
They'd left me behind. Again.
I braced my hands on either side of the garden shed's doorframe, drawing as close as I could to the enchanted passageway without entering. Hollowers called these dark tunnels Veins because they carried you from one location to another in an instant. In this case, to the vault of a long-dead sorceress, containing her most prized possessions.
I checked the time on the cracked screen of Nash's ancient cell phone. It had been forty-eight minutes since I watched them disappear into the Vein. I hadn't been able to run fast enough to catch up, and if they'd heard my shouts, they'd ignored me.
The phone screen blinked to black as the battery finally croaked.
"Hello?" I called, fiddling with the key they'd left in the lock-one of the sorceress's finger bones, dipped into a bit of her blood. "I'm not going back to camp, so you may as well just tell me when it's safe to come in! Do you hear me?"
Only the passage answered, breathing out whorls of snow. Great. The Sorceress Edda had chosen to put her collection of relics somewhere even colder than England in the winter.
The fact that Cabell and Nash weren't answering had my insides squirming. But Nash had never been deterred by the promise of danger, and he was about to discover I wouldn't be deterred by anyone, least of all my rotten bastard of a guardian.
"Cabell?" I said, louder this time. The cold gripped my words, leaving white streaks in the air. A shiver rippled through me. "Is everything all right? I'm coming in whether you want me to or not!"
Of course Nash had taken Cabell with him. Cabell was useful to him. But if I wasn't there, there was no one to make sure my brother didn't end up hurt, or worse.
The sun was shy, hiding behind silver clouds. Behind me, an abandoned stone cottage kept watch over the nearby fields. The air was quiet, which always stirred up my nerves. I held my breath, straining my ears to listen. No humming traffic, no drone of passing airplanes, not even a chirp from a bird. It was like everyone else knew better than to come to this cursed place, and Nash was the only idiot too stupid and greedy to risk it.
But a moment later, a fresh wave of snow carried Cabell's voice to me.
"Tamsin?" He sounded excited, at least. "Watch your head as you come in!"
I plunged into the Vein's disorienting darkness. Outside was nothing compared to the barbed cold that wrapped around me now, knifing at my skin until I couldn't draw breath.
In two steps, the round doorway at the other end of the Vein carved itself out of the black air. In three, it became a vivid wall of ghostly light. Blue, almost like-
I glanced down at the broken chunks of ice scattered around the doorway, at the swirling curse sigils carved into them. I turned, searching for Cabell, but a hand caught me, stopping me in my tracks.
"I told you to stay at the camp." With his head lamp on, Nash's face was in shadow, but I could feel the anger radiating from him like the warmth from his skin. "We'll have words about this, Tamsin."
"What are you going to do, ground me?" I asked, riding high on my victory.
"Perhaps I will, you wee fool," he said. "Never do anything without knowing the cost."
The light from his head lamp danced over me, then swung upward. My gaze followed.
Icicles jutted down from the ceiling. Hundreds of them, all capped with razor-sharp steel, poised to fall at any moment. The walls, the ground, the ceiling-all of it was solid ice.
Even in the darkness, Cabell was easy to spot in his tattered yellow windbreaker. Relief poured through me as I made my way to his side, crouching to help him pick up unused crystals. He'd used the stones to absorb the magic of the curses surrounding the doorways. Once the curses were nullified, Nash had taken his axe to their sigils.
All Hollowers could perform a version of what Cabell was doing, but they could only clear curses with tools they'd bought off sorceresses.
Cabell was special, even among the Hollowers with special magic. He was the first Expeller in centuries-someone who could redirect the magic of a curse away from one source and into another, deflecting spells fr...
Lancashire, England
The first thing you learned on the job as a Hollower was to never trust your eyes.
Nash, of course, had a different way of saying it: All sorcery is half illusion. The other half, unfortunately, was blood-soaked terror.
In that moment, though, I wasn't scared. I was as angry as a spitting cat.
They'd left me behind. Again.
I braced my hands on either side of the garden shed's doorframe, drawing as close as I could to the enchanted passageway without entering. Hollowers called these dark tunnels Veins because they carried you from one location to another in an instant. In this case, to the vault of a long-dead sorceress, containing her most prized possessions.
I checked the time on the cracked screen of Nash's ancient cell phone. It had been forty-eight minutes since I watched them disappear into the Vein. I hadn't been able to run fast enough to catch up, and if they'd heard my shouts, they'd ignored me.
The phone screen blinked to black as the battery finally croaked.
"Hello?" I called, fiddling with the key they'd left in the lock-one of the sorceress's finger bones, dipped into a bit of her blood. "I'm not going back to camp, so you may as well just tell me when it's safe to come in! Do you hear me?"
Only the passage answered, breathing out whorls of snow. Great. The Sorceress Edda had chosen to put her collection of relics somewhere even colder than England in the winter.
The fact that Cabell and Nash weren't answering had my insides squirming. But Nash had never been deterred by the promise of danger, and he was about to discover I wouldn't be deterred by anyone, least of all my rotten bastard of a guardian.
"Cabell?" I said, louder this time. The cold gripped my words, leaving white streaks in the air. A shiver rippled through me. "Is everything all right? I'm coming in whether you want me to or not!"
Of course Nash had taken Cabell with him. Cabell was useful to him. But if I wasn't there, there was no one to make sure my brother didn't end up hurt, or worse.
The sun was shy, hiding behind silver clouds. Behind me, an abandoned stone cottage kept watch over the nearby fields. The air was quiet, which always stirred up my nerves. I held my breath, straining my ears to listen. No humming traffic, no drone of passing airplanes, not even a chirp from a bird. It was like everyone else knew better than to come to this cursed place, and Nash was the only idiot too stupid and greedy to risk it.
But a moment later, a fresh wave of snow carried Cabell's voice to me.
"Tamsin?" He sounded excited, at least. "Watch your head as you come in!"
I plunged into the Vein's disorienting darkness. Outside was nothing compared to the barbed cold that wrapped around me now, knifing at my skin until I couldn't draw breath.
In two steps, the round doorway at the other end of the Vein carved itself out of the black air. In three, it became a vivid wall of ghostly light. Blue, almost like-
I glanced down at the broken chunks of ice scattered around the doorway, at the swirling curse sigils carved into them. I turned, searching for Cabell, but a hand caught me, stopping me in my tracks.
"I told you to stay at the camp." With his head lamp on, Nash's face was in shadow, but I could feel the anger radiating from him like the warmth from his skin. "We'll have words about this, Tamsin."
"What are you going to do, ground me?" I asked, riding high on my victory.
"Perhaps I will, you wee fool," he said. "Never do anything without knowing the cost."
The light from his head lamp danced over me, then swung upward. My gaze followed.
Icicles jutted down from the ceiling. Hundreds of them, all capped with razor-sharp steel, poised to fall at any moment. The walls, the ground, the ceiling-all of it was solid ice.
Even in the darkness, Cabell was easy to spot in his tattered yellow windbreaker. Relief poured through me as I made my way to his side, crouching to help him pick up unused crystals. He'd used the stones to absorb the magic of the curses surrounding the doorways. Once the curses were nullified, Nash had taken his axe to their sigils.
All Hollowers could perform a version of what Cabell was doing, but they could only clear curses with tools they'd bought off sorceresses.
Cabell was special, even among the Hollowers with special magic. He was the first Expeller in centuries-someone who could redirect the magic of a curse away from one source and into another, deflecting spells fr...