Gr 7 Up–An engaging dual point-of-view story with an enemies-to-lovers romance plot that younger readers can enjoy. Haewon, 18, lives in late 1700s Korea, where women and their reputations are fragile; women are not expected to be seen outside of their homes, nor to have any contact with men unless they are married. Anything as fickle as rumors can “ruin” them and their families, so stakes are extremely high. However, much to her mother’s chagrin, Haewon is a frequent patron of Five Willows, a local bookstore with a secret: it has a hidden room in the back where titles are copied and reproduced, as this is a time when paper and the printing press were almost unattainable to most people. Haewon, using the pen name Magpie, is a well-respected transcriber notable for her accurate work. Local golden boy Seojun is in a completely different status bracket, but he, too, frequents Five Willows, where he enjoys books not only as a reader but as an author named Black Lotus. Haewon’s and Seojun’s worlds collide when the government starts banning books and raiding bookstores on the belief that novels are the downfall of moral values. The well-researched story is made richer by the author’s note, which includes more historical background details. Except for a couple of plot missteps, this compelling title will have broad appeal for its social justice subplots amid a setting where women’s rights are nonexistent and literacy is frowned upon.
VERDICT A great purchase for upper middle school and high school collections.
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