Book of Lamps and Banners

352 pages

English language

Published July 5, 2020 by Little Brown & Company.

ISBN:
978-0-316-48593-7
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4 stars (3 reviews)

Photographer Cass Neary is desperate to get home, and she's already lost her camera -- like losing a limb. Now her only chance is to cash in on a deal that a friend is about to cut for a legendary illuminated manuscript: The Book of Lamps and Banners. Rumored to have been rescued from the Library at Alexandria, the Book is said to contain ancient esoteric knowledge, even an otherworldly power.

So when an intruder brazenly steals the manuscript, Cass and her ex-con lover Quinn must get it back-plunging headlong into a shady underworld where antiquarian booksellers, unhinged tech entrepreneurs, and brutal nationalists all converge. This breathless psychological thriller, featuring one of the greatest amateur sleuths of the past decade, could only come from the mind of Elizabeth Hand.

4 editions

Review of 'Book of Lamps and Banners' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

CN: rape; CSA




This fourth book in Elizabeth Hand's Cass Neary series feels distinctly different than the others in the series. Whether that's down to the book itself or my own experiences and/or knowledge, I'm not entirely sure. I reread the first three novels in the series back-to-back before reading this one though and they have a certain dark mystique that this novel doesn't entirely replicate. If I can adopt, much less deftly than Hand herself does, the language of photography, the previous novels are a bit darker and out-of-focus while this one is better lit and sharper. I think that's partly due to the novel feeling more grounded in a specific time than the previous ones. Like in the previous novels, Hand does not explicitly give the year in which the story takes place and also does not use brand names. A cell phone is always a "mobile" and …

Review of 'Book of Lamps and Banners' on 'LibraryThing'

No rating

Fourth in the Cass Neary series, of which I've only read the first. The plot is rather silly (an ancient book that everyone wants that can mess with your mind, shades of Dan Brown) and the frustratingly self-destructive photographer protagonist who never recovered from the punk 90s is a mix of smart, vulnerable, and annoying, On the positive side, it's extremely well written and has some interesting things to say about visual art, which is a recurring feature of her fiction.

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4 stars