

The idea of a library in hell where unwritten books go to linger is a good one, but it isn't unique. Why did AJ Hackwith write a book specifically to shame me into finishing my own? The idea of meeting my own main character, and the overwhelming guilt that would follow that meeting, terrifies me. There is an idea in this book that if an author thinks about their unwritten character enough, that character will manifest and start walking around in the world. As I read though AJ Hackwith's novel, I couldn't help but feel a little called out. The main character of The Library of the Unwritten is a woman named Claire, librarian of Hell's library and an author whose own literary ideas never found fruition. I have been a librarian for most of my adult life, and also a writer. The unintentional horror of The Library of the Unwritten might specifically apply to me. Cover Reveal: Best Foot Forward (Ep# 1 of Brass Kn.Winter of the Witch by Katherine Arden (Reviewed b.The Origin of Birds in The Footprints of Writing b.Night Shift Dragons by Rachel Aaron (reviewed by M.A Boy in a Park by Richard Parkin (Reviewed by Dav.SPFBO 5: Conclusion & Some Thoughts (by Mihir Wanc.Shorefall by Robert Jackson Bennett (reviewed by C.Firewalkers by Adrian Tchaikovsky review (reviewed.Xindii: The Boy Who Walked Too Far by Dominic Wats.The Library of the Unwritten by AJ Hackwith (Revie.

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