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The Unlikely Escape of Uriah Heep

A Novel

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The ultimate book-lover's fantasy, this sparkling debut is a "delight of magic and literature, love and adventure" (Kat Howard) featuring a young scholar with the power to bring literary characters into the world.

For his entire life, Charley Sutherland has concealed a magical ability he can't quite control: He can bring characters from books into the real world.
But when literary characters start causing trouble throughout the city and threatening to destroying the world, he learns he's not the only one with his ability. Now it's up to Charley and his reluctant older brother, Rob, to stop them—hopefully before they reach The End.
Praise for The Unlikely Escape of Uriah Heep:
"A star-studded literary tour and a tangled mystery and a reflection on reading itself; it's a pure delight." —Alix E. Harrow, Hugo Award-winning author
"This beautifully-written novel is an exploration of the power fiction wields — the power to inform and to change, even to endanger, our everyday world." —Louisa Morgan, author of A Secret History of Witches
"Equal parts sibling rivalry, crackling mystery, and Dickensian battle royale, it'll be one of your most fun reads this year." —Mike Chen, author of Here and Now and Then
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      New Zealand native Calum Gittins portrays a host of characters in this mash-up of classic and contemporary literature. Charlie, a "summoner" who has the power to read objects and people out of books, is voiced in a soft and often frazzled tone that sometimes reaches an excited pace. Charlie's older brother, Rob, has a thicker New Zealand accent and a stern voice that gives way to guilt whenever he becomes upset with his younger sibling. Throughout the book, Gittins seamlessly transitions between a variety of accents, including Midwestern American, various British accents, and others. With the help of characters from well-known English literature such as Sherlock Holmes and Frankenstein, the brothers must solve a puzzling mystery while ensuring that no one outside the family discovers Charlie's uncanny ability. V.T. © AudioFile 2019, Portland, Maine
    • Booklist

      Starred review from July 1, 2019
      Readers often feel like characters come alive, but for Charley Sutherland, they literally do. Charley is a book summoner. Since he was a small child, when he reads deeply, characters can escape their books and enter the real world. Luckily, Charley can also summon them back. One night, he accidentally summons David Copperfield's Uriah Heep. He calls his brother Rob for help, much to Rob's annoyance at once again having to rescue his younger brother from a danger of his own making. Before Heep is read back, though, he makes some cryptic comments about the coming of a new world. That starts an adventure that includes the Hound of Baskervilles, Dorian Gray, and five Darcys. Much of the story is told from Rob's point of view, but there are a few chapters from Charley's perspective along with some from girl detective Millie Radcliffe-Dix. Fun, witty, and full of insights about the powerful effect of stories on our lives, this book is highly recommended. Give it to readers who devoured Jasper Fforde, Jim C. Hines' Libriomancer (2012), and Genevieve Cogman's The Invisible Library (2016), and to readers looking for adventurous fantasy with a soup�on of family drama.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from June 1, 2019
      Fictional characters come to life--both literally and figuratively--in New Zealand writer Parry's bookish debut. Rob Sutherland's younger brother, Charley, wakes him in the middle of the night with a panicked phone call. "Uriah Heep's loose on the ninth floor...and I can't catch him." Fans of Charles Dickens will know Uriah Heep as the scheming villain from David Copperfield, and that is, in fact, the same Uriah Heep Charley is worried about. Besides being a wunderkind who blazed through a Ph.D. at Oxford as a teenager, Charley is a "summoner": He is able to make storybook characters appear in the real world, reading them out and then back into the pages of their books. His tendency to produce characters, from the kindly Sherlock Holmes to the more devious Heep, has caused stress for his family as they try to keep his talent a secret. Rob is also struggling with feelings of resentment toward his genius, magical brother, who has always made him feel painfully average and ordinary by comparison. Then, when the brothers find a magically hidden Victorian-era street, they meet Millie Radcliffe-Dix--the protagonist of a girl-detective adventure series sort of like Nancy Drew crossed with Indiana Jones--and a whole host of other characters who've been living there in secret. It seems that Charley's strange gift is not unique, and somewhere out there is another summoner who has a malicious interest in Charley. Many have tried and some have succeeded in writing mashups with famed literary characters, but Parry knocks it out of the park. She plays with the canon without trying to imitate it, all the while spinning a truly heartfelt story about the strained but powerful love between Rob and Charley. An appreciation for Dickens and a passing knowledge of literary theory will provide extra enjoyment, but a lack thereof is no excuse to miss this page-turning fantasy. Just plain wonderful.

      COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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