The Book Eaters: the SUNDAY TIMES bestselling gothic fantasy horror – a debut to sink your teeth into

£7.495
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The Book Eaters: the SUNDAY TIMES bestselling gothic fantasy horror – a debut to sink your teeth into

The Book Eaters: the SUNDAY TIMES bestselling gothic fantasy horror – a debut to sink your teeth into

RRP: £14.99
Price: £7.495
£7.495 FREE Shipping

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Currently, elderly college graduation is almost an assured pass! No, globe occupation is simply an issue of time also?! “Yes, I will certainly consume them all! “Did a person state that simply tough job as well as willpower are inadequate? Well, they’re incorrect! Whatever has its time! A 1%chance which is likewise frustrating sometimes concerned discover its means to the 99 %totally diligent illusionist!

Book Eaters are a humanoid kind of vampiric alien race, with six ancient families holed up in stately homes across the UK, consuming books and paper for food, absorbing all information contained within them. There are arranged marriages, cold and efficient transactions, reproduction at speed so as not to miss out on very limited fertility windows. Children are rare and daughters rarest, their “protection” through childhood considered a worthwhile investment for the future of their race and the financial position of their family. Fed on fairytales and kept quiet and dutiful, these girls grow up expected only to serve their purpose. But there are dangerous anomalies in the families: children born not with a hunger for books but for minds and memories. And now there is a mother and child on the run, determined to escape the lives they’re fated to. By the way, the genre “harem” is not specified in the manhwa. Anyone who doesn’t like that genre can pass by). Spoiler about the harem in the novella Don't worry, I'm not going to star my own book. That would feel very strange! I'm just filling out this review form because YIKES, I have a novel on Goodreads!The Book Eaters is told in two timelines, as Dean spins the tale of Devon’s childhood and marriages, weaving this horror story into her fraught, exhausting present. When we meet Devon, she’s escaped Family life with Cai and is trying her best to take care of him, with all that entails—and sometimes it entails bodies. She’s also trying to find a connection to hook her up with Redemption, and trying to stay one step ahead of her dragon brother. Devon is a book eater, part of a race of supernatural entities that consumes tomes while absorbing the knowledge they contain. Devon is raising her five-year-old son Cai, who is not a book eater, but a mind-eater: he must sustain himself by feeding on the brains of others. This process is more vampiric than zombie: the feedings imprint the victims’ personalities upon Cai, so this five-year-old must contend with multiple identities constantly fighting for control of his mind. Lo bien que suena se queda por el camino. El problema de este libro es la propia ejecución de toda su trama. As a child, Theo used to play in the woods and valleys throughout the barony. He had even been to the cave which the grimoire Death's Worship later used as its base.

Theodore Miller, a stopping working pupil that has actually not finished from the academy for 3 years. A brilliant mind and also solid will alone can not get rid of the wall surface of skill so his regrettable truth of not being an illusionist continued. After days of misery as well as vast sighs, a brand-new transforming factor comes …’Gluttony ‘: a magic publication that greedily takes in expertise and also makes the claimed understanding the power of its master found Theodore’s hands.If he obtains his hands on any type of publication, any type of magic in it becomes his. Read Book Eater Manga. No, wait. She still had a half bottle of whiskey, left behind by the previous person she’d brought to her home. Devon didn’t like whiskey, but right now she liked being sober even less. A couple minutes of rifling through the cabinets turned up the errant alcohol. Sunyi Dean writes a stunning dark urban fantasy, of disturbing fairytales, the ruthless oppression of women, with elements of horror, the nightmare that is your controlling patriarchal family living remote and separate from normal human society, that asks who are the real monsters, and details the impact of a terrible love. The tall Devon Fairweather is a book eater princess, growing up in the Yorkshire Fairweather Manor, close to no-one, not knowing any women, raised on a diet of fairytales and cautionary tales, not missing a mother she cannot remember, blissfully unaware of the invisible iron bars of the prison she is trapped in. However, the first tentacles of disillusion set in after her first arranged marriage to Luton Winterfield, when she becomes a mother, with her inklings of the bitter knowledge that she is completely powerless. Living on the Yorkshire Moors is an ancient and secretive line of families known as Book Eaters. They sustain themselves by eating books and retaining the information contained within them. Each genre releases a unique flavor in each book that is consumed.I am sorry to say this book has been a complete disappointment to me, even more so because it was one of my most anticipated releases of the year. Devon is part of The Family, an old and reclusive clan of book eaters. Her brothers grow up feasting on stories of valor and adventure, and Devon—like all other book eater women—is raised on a carefully curated diet of fairy tales and cautionary stories. I think every single person who ever read a boo thought “Why can’t we just eat books and retain their contents?” and that is the premise of The Book Eaters by Sunyi Dean. As soon as I saw the synopsis I knew it was a book that I was gonna read and I did that as soon as it was released. She stalked out, annoyed and flustered. Hordes of teenagers bought booze from other corner shops all the time. It was a daily occurrence around here. That someone would choose to card her, so clearly an adult, was ridiculous.

I know that this book will not be for everyone, and that is completely okay! I hope your next book pleases you better <3 The themes in this book were really on point and well explored. I loved seeing the insight into book eater culture and how the mind eaters are treated as monsters and the politics within the book eater world to control them. One of the Families has a substance called redemption which means mind eaters can eat books to survive but they are beholden to this one family having a monopoly. There is also a lot of discussion around religious fanaticism (but not actual religion more just an allegory) and the world of the book eaters is very cult-like and Devon journey and emotions in escaping them definitely has parallels with people in real life who have escaped cults. Female book eaters are rare, so Devon’s Family—and the other Families of book eaters across modern day United Kingdom—arrange temporary marriages between Houses for procreative purposes. Eater women are used as little more than birthing cows before being forcibly separated from their children and moved onto the next marriage. It’s a patriarchal society full of empty promises and it’s horrifying. Really, it was pointless to apologize. Victims didn’t want your sorry-so-sorrys when you were hurting them, they wanted you to stop. Devon couldn’t oblige, though, and apologies were all she had these days. Apologies, and booze.

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This is a personal preference but setting this kind of story in the modern times just didn't work for me at all. The way the families operated and the language they used felt very Victorian, and therefore any mention of motorcycles or video games (this was a particularly annoying one for me) did nothing but pulled me out of the story. The narrative structure of the book divides its time between Devon’s past, alternating chapters with present day Devon and Cai on the run. Dean is a brilliant world-builder, farming out just enough bits of information along the way to help fill in the gaps of Devon’s early years while helping the reader understand her motivation and goals in the present timeline. Not all is as it seems. No one here is exactly a princess or a knight or a dragon, but this is the mythos of the Families. The rare girls are prized, but kept in the dark about so many things. Their purpose is to grow up, marry twice, bearing one child in each marriage, and then become one of the aunts who lurk around the old houses. Knights help all of this along. Dragons, though, have no say in anything. There exists a group of people in Northern England whose sustenance is the written word; they live off eating books and retain the knowledge from the texts they consume. Devon is one of these people, born and raised in a society where women are few and are protected at all costs, even to their detriment. She’s raised on a diet of fairytales and happy endings, but as she grows older, she realizes that these books are far from reality. As she struggles with the realities of her life, she begins to wonder if it’s possible to break free from what she’s always known.



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  • EAN: 764486781913
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