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A review by bibliobrittish
Tilly and the Map of Stories by Anna James
5.0
I have immensely enjoyed bookwandering with Tilly up until this point, but I never fell in completely love with a Pages & Co book until this one, struggling to get past some of the politics. But from the very first page, Tilly and the Map of Stories drew me into the magical world of stories in a way the previous two books hadn't yet - the most perfect bookseller joke. And it just got better from there.
The Map of Stories is pure comfort because it is a much-needed reminder of why all of us book worms are so entranced by 'book magic.' It's stories that draw us in, and imagination that fuels them. Anna James has made perfect use of both in a tale where the good guys win, but you never know what's around the corner along the way. With high stakes, magic trains, returning classic characters, and new author cameos (who are immediately recognizable), dare I say this might be the perfect bookish adventure?
11/19/2020: On the front cover, a blurb read ‘as comforting as hot chocolate.’ I’ll drink some cocoa to that and come back with a review of one of the sweetest, most wonderful bookish books ever soon...
The Map of Stories is pure comfort because it is a much-needed reminder of why all of us book worms are so entranced by 'book magic.' It's stories that draw us in, and imagination that fuels them. Anna James has made perfect use of both in a tale where the good guys win, but you never know what's around the corner along the way. With high stakes, magic trains, returning classic characters, and new author cameos (who are immediately recognizable), dare I say this might be the perfect bookish adventure?
11/19/2020: On the front cover, a blurb read ‘as comforting as hot chocolate.’ I’ll drink some cocoa to that and come back with a review of one of the sweetest, most wonderful bookish books ever soon...