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The Book of Love

US: signed/personalized copies available from Book Moon. UK: Head of Zeus. Playlists: Apple. Spotify.

In the long-awaited debut novel from bestselling author and Pulitzer Prize finalist Kelly Link, three teenagers become pawns in a supernatural power struggle.

The Book of Love showcases Kelly Link at the height of her powers, channeling potent magic and attuned to all varieties of love—from friendship to romance to abiding family ties—with her trademark compassion, wit, and literary derring-do. Readers will find joy (and a little terror) and an affirmation that love goes on, even when we cannot.

Local profile: Daily Hampshire Gazette.

Late one night, Laura, Daniel, and Mo find themselves beneath the fluorescent lights of a high school classroom, almost a year after disappearing from their hometown, the small seaside community of Lovesend, Massachusetts, having long been presumed dead. Which, in fact, they are.

With them in the room is their previously unremarkable high school music teacher, who seems to know something about their disappearance—and what has brought them back again. Desperate to reclaim their lives, the three agree to the terms of the bargain their music teacher proposes. They will be given a series of magical tasks; while they undertake them, they may return to their families and friends, but they can tell no one where they’ve been. In the end, there will be winners and there will be losers.

But their resurrection has attracted the notice of other supernatural figures, all with their own agendas. As Laura, Daniel, and Mo grapple with the pieces of the lives they left behind, and Laura’s sister, Susannah, attempts to reconcile what she remembers with what she fears, these mysterious others begin to arrive, engulfing their community in danger and chaos, and it becomes imperative that the teens solve the mystery of their deaths to avert a looming disaster.

Welcome to Kelly Link’s incomparable Lovesend, where you’ll encounter love and loss, laughter and dread, magic and karaoke, and some really good pizza.

Reviews:

“A page-turner that explores what it means to truly be alive.”
Time, 100 Must Read Books of 2024

“Short story writer Link tries her hand at a novel and magnificently pulls it off with this fantasy-fueled ghost story. It’s about three dead teens who get a chance to come back to life, and as Link chronicles their interlocking lives, the narrative sheds fascinating light on the nature of love.”
Publishers Weekly, 10 Best Books of 2024

The Book of Love does justice to its name. Its composition, its copiousness, suggests that love, in the end, contains all—that frustration, rage, vulnerability, loss and grief are love’s constituent parts, bound by and into it.” — Amal El-Mohtar, The New York Times Book Review

“Pulitzer finalist Link (White Cat, Black Dog) makes a dazzling full-length debut that proves her gloriously idiosyncratic style shines just as brightly at scale. . . .  Link dexterously somersaults between tonal registers—from playfully whimsical (love and magic are both explained via a comparison to asparagus) to hair-raising and uncanny (a cat goes from grooming itself to devouring itself whole)—without ever missing a step. This is a masterpiece.” — Publishers Weekly (starred review)

“A moving and deft exploration of the many ways ‘love goes on even when we cannot.’” — Booklist (starred review)

“A supernatural story about love in all its guises bewitches. . . . The places of this novel are both glitteringly strange and so fully realized that one feels one might visit them tomorrow.” — San Francisco Chronicle

“[Link’s]. . . . writing sparkles with wit and colour, and there is much camp weirdness and shimmering grandeur.” — The Spectator (UK)

“The wonders of Hollywood special effects feel like garish imitations next to Link’s sorcery.” — The Washington Post

“. . . if you are, possibly, a cynic looking for something to give you some renewed faith in love/friendship/literature in this month of cold and candy hearts, and/or find yourself wishing for a little more magic in your life, this is the novel for you. It’s even red.” — Lit Hub

“Haunting, immersive, and at times surpassingly beautiful.” — Locus

Early reactions:

The Book of Love is an incredible achievement—a novel whose people and places feel so true to life that the magic that shimmers through the pages like grown-up fairy dust seems not just real but unquestionable. This modern day Master and Margarita will remain with you long after you have turned the last lush and visionary page.” — Cassandra Clare, author of Sword Catcher

“By turns playful and harrowing, surreal and sagacious, replete with gods and other monsters, The Book of Love is an astonishing, gorgeous novel written with Link’s unique wit, warmth and ability to get under your skin.” — Holly Black, author of Book of Night

“An eldritch Our Town that somehow manages to be both epic and intimate. Link’s language is nimble and startling and goes down so easy. You won’t realize you’re drunk on this story until it’s too late and you’re careening from the spectacularly weird to the wildly funny to an aching grief almost too familiar to bear. A dizzying dream ride you will never forget.” — Leigh Bardugo, author of Ninth House

“Link has made a modern myth, grand enough to capture all the agony and absurdity and radiance of love itself. This is one of those books that cuts your life in two: before you read it, and after.” — Alix E. Harrow, author of Starling House

“A giant, glorious novel about friendship, love, queerness, rock-and-roll, stardom, parenthood, loyalty, lust and duty.” — Cory Doctorow, author of The Lost Cause

“What more can be said about Kelly Link, that has not been (breathlessly) said already? She is a sorcerer. She is our greatest living fabulist. There is no one like her. And The Book of Love is a luxurious, bewitching novel of exceptional beauty and power.” — Carmen Maria Machado, author of In the Dream House

“Pure enchantment—a tale of love, death, magic and teenagers being teenagers, rich with fairy strangeness and told in sentences like jewels strung on a chain.” — Zen Cho, author of Black Water Sister

“Link has a genius for combining the mundane with the uncanny, diving into the dark currents where dreams grow and bringing up magic-encrusted jetsam, pearlescent ideas that coil and shock.” — Kirkus Reviews

“An absolute feast of a story, ushering the reader along a path that is always sublime, often hilarious, and at every single point rammed full of heart and truth. . . . I wish I could have lived it for real, just a little.” — Melinda Salisbury, author of Her Dark Wings

Largehearted Boy Book Notes

Kelly has a huge “working” playlist (and also: huge headphones) and she wrote about part of it for David Gutowski’s Largehearted Boy Book Notes series:

I wrote the nine stories in Get in Trouble over not quite a decade. I wrote them, usually, with headphones on; usually listening to to the same songs over and over again. When no one else is around I sing out loud — embarrassingly, terribly, out of tune — mangling lyrics and harmonies. Does anyone else do this? Type out your own sentences while singing someone else’s lyrics? Anyway. I need to be distracted from the work that I’m doing while I’m doing it.

The songs below are culled from the very much larger playlist that I listen to when I work. There are significantly more than nine songs on it, but I couldn’t whittle it down any further. They’re the songs that I wore out the hardest while writing these stories. I’ve ordered them according to how long they’ve been stuck on that playlist, and for each story I’ve attached the song (or songs) that seemed to have particular resonances with it, and for me. [read on]

My True Love Gave to Me

If you love holiday stories, holiday movies, made-for-TV-holiday specials, holiday episodes of your favorite sitcoms and, especially, if you love holiday anthologies, you’re going to fall in love with My True Love Gave to Me: Twelve Holiday Stories by twelve bestselling young adult writers: Holly Black, Ally Carter, Matt de la Peña, Gayle Forman, Jenny Han, David Levithan, Kelly Link (“The Lady and the Fox”), Myra McEntire, Rainbow Rowell, Stephanie Perkins, Laini Tayler and Kiersten White.

About the Authors

STEPHANIE PERKINS has always worked with books—first as a bookseller, then as a librarian, and now as a novelist. She’s the author of the international bestsellers Anna and the French Kiss and Lola and the Boy Next Door, as well as Isla and the Happily Ever After. My True Love Gave to Me: Twelve Holiday Stories is her first anthology. Stephanie and her husband live in the mountains of North Carolina.

Gayle Forman is an investigative journalist who’s traveled the world to report for such publications as the New York Times Magazine, The Nation, Glamour, Elle, Details, Travel & Leisure, Budget Travel, Jane, and Seventeen. Gayle and her husband, Nick Tucker, are back at home (for now) in New York City with their baby daughter, Willa.

David Levithan is the author of The Lover’s Dictionary and many acclaimed young-adult novels, including the New York Times bestselling Nick & Norah’s Infinite Playlist (with Rachel Cohn), which was adapted into a popular movie. He is also an editorial director at Scholastic.

Kelly Link is the author of two collections, Stranger Things Happen, and Magic For Beginners (one of Time Magazines Best Books of the Year). Stories from her collections have won the Nebula, Hugo, World Fantasy, Tiptree, and Locus awards, and her work has recently appeared in A Public Space, Firebirds Rising, and Best American Short Stories 2005. Link and Gavin J. Grant started Small Beer Press in 2000. They have published the zine Lady Churchill’s Rosebud Wristlet (“Tiny, but celebrated” — Washington Post) for ten years. An anthology, The Best of Lady Churchill’s Rosebud Wristlet, will be published this autumn.

STEPHANIE PERKINS has always worked with books—first as a bookseller, then as a librarian, and now as a novelist. She’s the author of the international bestsellers Anna and the French Kiss and Lola and the Boy Next Door, as well as Isla and the Happily Ever After. My True Love Gave to Me: Twelve Holiday Stories is her first anthology. Stephanie and her husband live in the mountains of North Carolina.

RAINBOW ROWELL writes books. Sometimes she writes about adults (Attachments and Landline). Sometimes she writes about teenagers (Eleanor & Park, Fangirl and Carry On). But she always writes about people who talk a lot. And people who feel like they’re screwing up. And people who fall in love.

When she’s not writing, Rainbow is reading comic books, planning Disney World trips and arguing about things that don’t really matter in the big scheme of things.

She lives in Nebraska with her husband and two sons.

New York Times best selling young adult author Laini Taylor contributed to My True Love Gave to Me: Twelve Holiday Stories.

Praise For…


“Rich language and careful, efficient character development make the collection an absorbing and sophisticated read, each story surprisingly fresh despite the constraints of a shared theme. It’s that rarest of short story collections: There’s not a single lump of coal.” —Kirkus (starred review)

“There’s no shortage of cozy setups for holiday romance in this captivating collection of short stories…a rare seasonal treat.” —Publishers Weekly (starred review)

“Holiday canoodling stories by twelve of the top YA authors? It’s a Christmas miracle! This is the substantive stuff of dream stockings: a rollicking, blush-inducing, memorable holiday collection of breezy, bite-sized stories perfect a snug evening next to the fire.” —Booklist (starred review)

“Never mind the winter holidays; booktalk this title all year round.” —School Library Journal (starred review)

“Stunning and diverse, this holiday anthology is pure magic. This is what all anthologies should aspire to be.” —RT Book Review, 4.5 stars, “Top Pick”

“This collection of holiday stories reminds readers that while the season can be painful, it’s also a time of hope. It’s a marvelous collection, certain to earn a treasured spot on many Y.A. shelves.” —The New York Times Book Review

My True Love Gave to Me is a plummy treat… Its best stories are worth savoring long past the seasonal expiration date and even beyond the teen years.” —The Washington Post

“Satisfying and just sweet enough, like a good Christmas cookie, this will obviously appeal to those readers who get out the holiday decorations the day after Halloween, and it may even convert a Scrooge or two.” —The Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books

. . . Listen to a Story

Kelly Link reading . . .

The New Boyfriend” on APM’s Dinner Party Download

Origin Story” on NPR (1 min. 22)

The Hortlak” on Writer’s Block (KQED)

Catskin” on Spinning (WNYC)

Monster” (Real Audio file) WSUI, Prairie Lights Books (11/05)

Kelly and Karen Joy Fowler on Authors@Google, including Kelly reading a part of “Some Zombie Contingency Plans.”

Short excerpt from “Light” at the Stonecoast MFA program “flash reading” by faculty members.
Another excerpt from “Light” at Poets & Writers.

Tiny excerpt from “Monster” during a WNYC story by Richard Hake on the Dirty Laundry Readings Series. (Nov. 10, 2005)

“Most of My Friends are Two-Thirds Water” on Snap Judgment, October 2016.

Kelly Link’s stories read by . . .

The Specialist’s Hat” on LeVar Burton Reads

“The Hortlak” on PodCastle

Some Zombie Contingency Plans” read by Norm Sherman on PodCastle, Sept. 1, 2010

Pretty Monsters, Recorded Books, May 2009

“The Hortlak” Part 1 | Part 2 read by Frank Marcopolis.

The Girl Detective” read by Alex Wilson.

Most of My Friends are Two-Thirds Water” read by Alex Wilson.

“The Specialist’s Hat” on PodCastle

Carnation, Lily, Lily, Rose” on Pseudopod

The Specialist’s Hat” read by Jason Lundberg.

Interviews

Nerdette, WBEZ Chicago

Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy. (Read excerpts here.)

The State of Things, WUNC, North Carolina, with ABA president and co-owner of BookPeople in Austin, Texas, Steve Bercu.

Kelly interviewed by Rebecca King for Hold That Thought at Washington University in St. Louis (March 2013)

Kelly on the Titanium Physicists: Drinking Superfluid from the Fire Hose of Knowledge (May 2012)

The Horror, The Horror, To the Best of Our Knowledge, WPR

Bookworm, KCRW, 1/06 — for Noisy Outlaws, Unfriendly Blobs and Some Other Things… (McSweeney’s) with editor Ted Thompson and fellow contributor Jonathan Safran Foer.

Read Me

The Summer People (Wall Street Journal)

I Can See Right Through You (McSweeney’s)

Light (Tin House)

Origin Story (A Public Space)

Read an excerpt of The Wrong Grave (The Restless Dead)

Some Zombie Contingency Plans” (The Living Dead)

The Faery Handbag

The Specialist’s Hat” (Event Horizon)

Nonfiction

Largehearted Boy Book Notes (music playlist)

What Scares Me,” Time (b)

Lost introduction to Drawn and Quarterly Showcase 1 featuring Kevin Huizenga, Anders Nilsen, and Nicolas Robel