Discovering an ultimate library containing every book in the universe, young Lenora becomes an apprentice librarian and must tap the library's infinite knowledge about missions in space and the future before encountering a dark and destructive force. Simultaneous eBook. - (Baker & Taylor)
When her parents are off traveling the globe, Lenora finds a secret doorway to a library containing all the universe's wisdom. - (Baker & Taylor)
"With her parents off traveling the globe, Lenora is bored, bored, bored -- until she discovers a secret doorway into the ultimate library. Mazelike and reality-bending, the library contains all the universe's wisdom. Every book ever written, and every fact ever known, can be found within its walls. And Lenora becomes its newly appointed Fourth Assistant Apprentice Librarian. She rockets to the stars, travels to a future filled with robots, and faces down a dark nothingness that wants to destroy all knowledge. To save the library, Lenora will have to test her limits and uncover secrets hidden among its shelves"-- - (Baker & Taylor)
Named a best book of the year by Kirkus Reviews, The Library of Ever is an instant classic for middle grade readers and booklovers everywhere—an adventure across time and space, as a young girl becomes a warrior for the forces of knowledge.
With her parents off traveling the globe, Lenora is bored, bored, bored—until she discovers a secret doorway into the ultimate library. Mazelike and reality-bending, the library contains all the universe’s wisdom. Every book ever written, and every fact ever known, can be found within its walls. And Lenora becomes its newly appointed Fourth Assistant Apprentice Librarian.
She rockets to the stars, travels to a future filled with robots, and faces down a dark nothingness that wants to destroy all knowledge. To save the library, Lenora will have to test her limits and uncover secrets hidden among its shelves.
An Imprint Book
An Amazon Best Book of the Month
One of Kirkus Reviews’ Best Books of the Year
“Unusually clever.” —Kirkus Reviews, starred review
“Zeno Alexander's The Library of Ever reads like someone mixed Neil Gaiman with Chris Grabenstein, then threw in an extra dash of charm. Reading it is like getting lost in an entire library full of books, and never wanting to leave!”
—James Riley, New York Times bestselling author of the Story Thieves series
“Full of whimsy and pluck, The Library of Ever is a total delight!”
—Wendy Mass, New York Times bestselling author
- (
McMillan Palgrave)
After emerging from the shadows of the past, his history yet to be fully explained, Zeno Alexander spent years exploring the world's libraries before settling down in his lavish underground bunker, where he regularly hosts exquisite dinner parties and tends to his collection of extinct plants. His friendship with the famous librarian, Lenora, has turned into a series of biographical works devoted to chronicling her adventures. - (McMillan Palgrave)
Booklist Reviews
In this delightful first novel, Alexander introduces Lenora, a legendary librarian who is a true warrior against the forces of lies and darkness. What begins as a day of absolute boredom for the girl turns into an extraordinary one when Lenora happens upon a portal into a magical library with, well, everything. Though only 11, she takes up a job there as an assistant and soon learns all sorts of things while helping patrons, discovering, to her dismay, that there are people out there who will fight with all they have to prevent others from gaining knowledge. Poignant in today's political discourse, the story delivers hard truths that can be verily summed up to "knowledge is power." Lenora's adventure is a whirlwind of characters and events in time and space, and our resourceful heroine navigates it all while keeping her promises and sticking to her principles. This book is for every person who has ever believed that libraries are magic and anyone who has spent enough time in one knows that libraries aren't just for books. Grades 3-6. Copyright 2019 Booklist Reviews.
Kirkus Reviews
A bored preteen discovers that there's more to library work than developing a world-class "SHUSH" or shooting through librarian-sized pneumatic tubes. Indeed, hardly has 11-year-old Lenora stepped through the mysterious portal that connects her public library to a much, much larger one then she is invited to take the librarian's oath ("Do you swear to venture forth bravely and find the answer to any question, no matter the challenge?"). She's given a Fourth Assistant Apprentice Librarian badge and whirled off on a series of assignments that take her from the year 8000 to correct a leap-year misconception to a near stranding on a massive globe as she searches for the place with the world's longest name. And as if such realistically typical reference work isn't hard enough on its own, along the way she is repeatedly attacked by bowler-wearing villains (some of them robots) collectively known as the Forces of Darkness and dedicated to the suppression of intellectual freedom. For tunately, being the resourceful sort who gets a thrill of pleasure from realizing that she is lost, Lenora is well up to most challenges—and for the rest she gets solid support from a multispecies supporting cast led by her supervisor, Chief Answerer Malachi. Lenora presents white; Malachi is a 10-foot-tall, dark-skinned woman. Not the first tale to be set in a universal library but unusually clever in the details and commendably accurate in its own way. (Fantasy. 9-11) Copyright Kirkus 2019 Kirkus/BPI Communications. All rights reserved.
School Library Journal Reviews
Gr 3–6—Eleven-year-old Lenora is desperately bored. Her wealthy parents have flippantly dismissed Lenora's aspirations to obtain a job at the planetarium, the museum, or the zoo. Worse, she is forced to accompany her inattentive nanny on errands by limousine. Luckily, the nanny needs to stop at the library, and is indeed inattentive. Within the first 10 pages, Lenora discovers a mysterious stone arch in a wall of the library through which she crosses into the realm of a much larger, fantastical library that agrees to give her a job. Dubbed a Fourth Assistant Apprentice Librarian, Lenora fearlessly embarks on a series of short, magical adventures in order to answer patrons' reference questions and provide other customer service. Lenora must also contend with the Forces of Darkness, unsavory individuals in bowler hats dedicated to the causes of censorship, control, and the ignorance of the masses. Breezily episodic and fast-paced, the action here begins right away. Deus ex machina moments abound, but seem fitting to the solemnly whimsical plot. Lenora is dedicated to her new career at any cost, and never once questions any of the fantasy elements she encounters or the responsibilities she is given. Quirkily self-referential in tone, the writing attempts to create inside jokes with the reader, e.g., the hypersensitivity of beluga whales and their unique mastery of English. VERDICT Purchase for larger libraries, for passionate library fans, or to spark early conversations about intellectual freedom.—Sara White, Seminole County Public Library, Casselberry, FL
Copyright 2019 School Library Journal.