Ex-Libris

Hardcover, 391 pages

English language

Published July 6, 1998 by Chatto & Windus.

ISBN:
978-1-85619-599-7
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3 stars (2 reviews)

A cryptic summons to a remote country house launches Isaac Inchbold, a London bookseller and antiquarian, on an odyssey through seventeenth-century Europe. Charged with the task of restoring a magnificent library destroyed by the war, Inchbold moves between Prague and the Tower Bridge in London, his fortunes—and his life—hanging on his ability to recover a missing manuscript. Yet the lost volume is not what it seems, and his search is part of a treacherous game of underworld spies and smugglers, ciphers, and forgeries. Inchbold's adventure is compelling from beginning to end as Ross King vividly recreates the turmoil of Europe in the seventeenth century—the sacks of great cities; Raleigh's final voyage; the quest for occult knowledge; and a watery escape from three mysterious horsemen.

5 editions

Review of 'Ex-libris' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

A generally favorable impression. Quibbles were the book's DanBrownishness, and the sometimes jarring transistions between 1st and 3rd person. What was appreciated was King's acceptance of the intelligence of his readers, and the great sense of place in the book. (I had found some prints of Nonsuch House on the internet and brought them to the meeting. It was surprising to me how big it was - four stories tall and completely overarching London Bridge, and extending far past the width of the bridge.)

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2 stars

Subjects

  • Nonfiction - General
  • Historical fiction
  • Non-Classifiable

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