The First Bright Thing
Books | Fiction / Fantasy / Historical
3
J. R. Dawson
A spellbinding historical debut for fans of The Night Circus and The Invisible Life of Addie La Rue.‘This is the magic circus book that I have been looking for all my life' – Seanan McGuire, author of the Wayward Children seriesWhen darkness descends, expect sparks.After the First World War, a select few wake up with frightening magical abilities. Rin can jump through time. Her wife, Odette, can heal the unhealable. And their friend, Mauve, sees what others can’t. Alone, afraid and exiled from regular society, the trio create a haven for Sparks – people like them – a circus housing those who are powerful and lost.Now it’s 1926 and Rin runs the Circus of the Fantasticals. It travels across the States, spreading enchantment and joy to those who need it. Rin hopes their performances leave the world brighter than before. But new threats loom that even circus lights can’t vanquish. Another devastating war is barrelling across the world. Worse still, Rin’s past creeps closer every day, a malevolent shadow she can’t fully escape. This takes the form of a rival circus, with tents as black as midnight. Its leader has dark powers and even darker desires as the Sparks have something he wants – and Rin knows he won’t stop until he has it.‘A masterpiece of the fantastical and the human’ – Freya Marske, author of A Marvellous Light*Longlisted for Best Novel at the British Science Fiction Association Awards 2023*
AD
Buy now:
More Details:
Author
J. R. Dawson
Pages
400
Publisher
Pan Macmillan
Published Date
2023-06-22
ISBN
1035018225 9781035018222
Community ReviewsSee all
"I’m having a hard time thinking about how i felt about this book because it was one of my most anticipated books of the year and reading those is terrifying. Ultimately I enjoyed it; it had all the magic and emotion I wanted, though certainly not in a way that I expected. It’s one of those books that’s not hard to read or unengaging but feels difficult for some unknowable reason. Maybe it was the subject matter, maybe it was the timelines, maybe it was the predictability? I was hoping for a twist and didn’t get it. I thought maybe at the mention of a betrayer Ruth would not turn out to be Rin (since at that point Rin’s story about her mother conflicts with Ruth’s POV) and that Ruth would be another person at the circus which would’ve been sick, but nah it’s pretty much what you figure out immediately during Edwards chapters. In a book marketed as Queer Found Family Magic Circus I also expected more than one genderqueer side character but maybe that was just me. So essentially, great book but not what I expected, and not necessarily what I needed."