


But something about the contemporary, urban setting seems to free something in Black’s writing, allowing her to really dig into a story that is, at its heart, about trauma. There’s a prickly heroine, a twisty plot, and a central relationship that is something other than what it initially appears to be.

(But generally great cheekbones.) And her books are a blast-creative, propulsive narratives populated by an array of memorable characters you’ll either love immediately or love to hate, and the sort of addictive storytelling that means you’ll “accidentally” tear through one in the course of a day or two.īook of Night may be Black’s first adult fantasy novel, but it contains many of the hallmarks that have made her writing so popular for years. A New York Times bestselling writer who is probably best known for her “Folk of the Air” series, Black’s work is richly imagined, lushly written, and usually populated by an assortment of fairy folk with questionable, often sinister intentions. If you’ve read any popular young adult fantasy authors in the last few years, odds are you’ve encountered the work of Holly Black before.
