Review posted December 16, 2024
Simon & Schuster Audio, 2023. 10 hours, 25 minutes.
Review written December 10, 2024, from a library eaudiobook.
Starred Review
I recently read my second F. T. Lukens book, Otherworldly. It was super fun, and reminded me of how much I enjoyed So This Is Ever After - so I realized I needed to listen to the book I'd missed (while on the Morris committee in 2023), Spellbound.
I was very glad I made up the oversight. And a hot tip is that these ones are all worth listening to. Kevin R. Free voices the main male lead in all three books, and he comes across beautifully as an adorkable, slightly goofy and outgoing character you want to hug and have as a best friend.
In this book, he reads Edison, a teen who's been cut off from the world of magic since the death of his grandmother a year ago. So he goes to the office of Hexagon, where Antonia Hex works as a Cursebreaker, and begs for a job. Never mind that he doesn't have any magic of his own. He misses his grandma and wants to be back in the magical community. Besides, he's good at fixing electronic gadgets that always break around Antonia.
Edison has also been working on an app that will show him where the ley lines are - the lines that magic workers can naturally see and access. Since he can't see them, maybe the app can make up the difference. What Edison doesn't know is that according to the Consortium, that app is highly illegal. Also, after what happened with her last apprentice, Antonia is not allowed to take on a new apprentice. And it's even more illegal to train someone who can't see magic on their own.
But one thing leads to another. Antonia gives him a new name, Rook, and working in the office he meets another cursebreaker and his cute apprentice, Sun. Then later, when they're supposed to be sorting cursed objects in a haunted house, Sun saves Rook from a Cursed Curtain that tries to kill him. Sun is prickly, but Rook thinks they're awfully cute. Later, it turns out he can help Sun with their math homework - which brings the two of them even closer together.
But the more Rook learns about magic, the more illegal his existence becomes, and the greater the danger the Consortium will find out about his app. When he does get into trouble, both Cursebreakers and Sun are in trouble, too. Will Rook be able to do anything to save them all from the powerful magic wielders who are in charge?
This book ends up being a madcap adventure with a sweet romance thrown in. As with all of the F. T. Lukens characters I've heard read by Kevin Free, I found Rook lovable right from the start. Not that this is the same character! Both Rook and Sun are fleshed out with their own quirks and foibles, and here's wishing them a long and happy career in the world of magic.