The shattered city

Lisa Maxwell, 1979-

Book - 2022

Hunted by an ancient evil, Esta and Harte have raced through time and across a continent to track down the artifacts needed to bind the mystical Book's devastating power, and now, with only one artifact left, they must find a way to end the threat they have created or the very heart of magic will die.

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Subjects
Genres
Fantasy fiction
Young adult fiction
Time-travel fiction
Published
New York : Margaret K. McElderry Books [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Lisa Maxwell, 1979- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
756 pages : map ; 24 cm
Audience
HL810L
ISBN
9781534432512
9781665930956
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

At last, a conclusion! The fourth and final volume of the Last Magician series is finally here, and it's another doorstopper. Most secondary characters from the second and third volumes have fallen by the wayside, leaving Viola, Jianyu, and Nibsy/James from the Bowery gang the Devil's Own; primary leads Esta and Harte; and love interests Cela and Ruby, plus villain Jack. Time-hopping continues as Esta and Harte are transported to a changed 1983 in which the White supremacist, anti-magic Brotherhoods have only grown in power, while the rest of the gang continue in 1902, where Jack (last seen being killed in 1920) is alive and plotting. The short chapters contribute to the stop-and-go pacing. The plot is drawn out by foolish mistakes by the protagonists and padded by a lot of time spent kissing deeply, while the villains are the kind who spend pages internally gloating over their evil plots and seem unstoppable until a massive deus ex machina saves the day. What started off in the first volume, 2017's The Last Magician, as a sharp look at issues of the past and present through an imaginative premise has petered out by this point, and the characters from marginalized backgrounds are so lacking in depth as to approach being caricatures. For completists only. (Historical fantasy. 12-adult) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.