This is the first Gilly Macmillan book I have read. I have been assured that The Burning Library is not a good representation of her usual books. That being the case, and as promising as this book was, I will read more of her work.
Two rival organizations, both formed to advance women to powerful positions, are after an ancient artifact known as The Book of Wonder. One organization, the Larks, seeks to advance women directly. At the same time, the other —the Order of St. Katherine —believes a woman's power lies in being the one in the shadows, manipulating powerful men. Neither organization is above murder to achieve its goals.
Enter Anya Brown, a newly minted PhD student whose paper on solving the puzzling Folio 9 document gained her international attention. The Larks, thinking that Anya is the key to finding the missing artifact, give her an offer she can't refuse. Not suspecting the danger she is putting herself and her family in, Anya accepts the position and begins solving the puzzles related to the manuscript. It doesn't take long before Anya must decide between family and career. The decision has life-or-death consequences.
I liked the book's premise — advancing women to positions of power — but not so much the methods both groups used to achieve their goals. I also liked the descriptions of the puzzles Anya solved to try to find The Book of Wonder. They reminded me of Dan Brown's book, The Da Vinci Code, only without the one-paragraph chapters. What I didn't like was the ending. As it approached, I checked whether this was the first book in a series because there was so much to wrap up. Instead, Macmillan rushed the ending with broad explanations that weren't particularly satisfying. The Burning Library is a thought-provoking book; it just needed a better ending.
Thank you, NetGalley and William Morrow, for an advance copy of this book in exchange for an honest review. All opinions are my own. The publication date is November 18, 2025.
3/5 stars.
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