The Book That Held Her Heart 1v264s
ebook ∣ The Library Trilogy 473tq
By Mark Lawrence 1v5ij
Sign up to save your library 218y
With an OverDrive , you can save your favorite libraries for at-a-glance information about availability. Find out more about OverDrive s.
Find this title in Libby, the library reading app by OverDrive.

Search for a digital library with this title 2a1c17
Title found at these libraries: 6y51d
Library Name | Distance |
---|---|
Loading... |
Two people once connected by a vast and mysterious library are now separated and must overcome time and distance to reunite and bring peace to their worlds, in the final book of the Library Trilogy.
The fate of an infinite library hangs on one book, a book that holds the power to break the unbreakable. In the face of such forces, fragile things like hearts, worlds, and even family seem certain to fail.
The people most vital to Livira are scattered across time and space—lost, divided into factions, in mortal peril. Somehow she must bring them together and resolve the unresolvable argument that fuels the library’s war.
The bond between Livira and Evar has stretched and stretched again. Can it hold at the end, when things fall apart? Can it unite them against impossible odds?
This is the last chapter, the final page. The end threatens and no one—not characters, readers, or even the author—will emerge unscathed.
The fate of an infinite library hangs on one book, a book that holds the power to break the unbreakable. In the face of such forces, fragile things like hearts, worlds, and even family seem certain to fail.
The people most vital to Livira are scattered across time and space—lost, divided into factions, in mortal peril. Somehow she must bring them together and resolve the unresolvable argument that fuels the library’s war.
The bond between Livira and Evar has stretched and stretched again. Can it hold at the end, when things fall apart? Can it unite them against impossible odds?
This is the last chapter, the final page. The end threatens and no one—not characters, readers, or even the author—will emerge unscathed.