|
|
The Book of Ash and Bells (eBook)
|
|
|
The Book of Ash and Bells (eBook)
|
|
Riaan Hayes
|
|
Riaan Hayes
|
|
|
Prezzo:
€ 4,49
Disponibile dal 19/03/2026
|
Prezzo:
€ 4,49
Disponibile dal 19/03/2026
|
|
|
Formato :
|
EPUB |
|
Cloud:
|
Sì Scopri di più |
|
Compatibilità:
|
Tutti i dispositivi
|
|
Lingua:
|
Inglese |
|
Editore:
|
Riaan Hayes |
|
Codice EAN:
|
9798233191817 |
|
Anno pubblicazione:
|
2026 |
Scopri QUI come leggere i tuoi eBook
|
|
 | Abbonati a Kobo Plus per avere accesso illimitato a migliaia di eBook |
|
Note legali
NOTE LEGALI
b) Informazioni sul prezzo
Il prezzo barrato corrisponde al prezzo di vendita al pubblico al lordo di IVA e al netto delle spese di spedizione
Il prezzo barrato dei libri italiani corrisponde al prezzo di copertina.
I libri in inglese di Libraccio sono di provenienza americana o inglese.
Libraccio riceve quotidianamente i prodotti dagli USA e dalla Gran Bretagna, pagandone i costi di importazione, spedizione in Italia ecc.
Il prezzo in EURO è fissato da Libraccio e, in alcuni casi, può discostarsi leggermente dal cambio dollaro/euro o sterlina/euro del giorno. Il prezzo che pagherai sarà quello in EURO al momento della conferma dell'ordine.
In ogni caso potrai verificare la convenienza dei nostri prezzi rispetto ad altri siti italiani e, in moltissimi casi, anche rispetto all'acquisto su siti americani o inglesi.
c) Disponibilità
I termini relativi alla disponibilità dei prodotti sono indicati nelle Condizioni generali di vendita.
Disponibilità immediata
L'articolo è immediatamente disponibile presso Libraccio e saremo in grado di procedere con la spedizione entro un giorno lavorativo.
Nota: La disponibilità prevista fa riferimento a singole disponibilità.
Disponibile in giorni o settimane (ad es. "3-5-10 giorni", "4-5 settimane" )
L'articolo sarà disponibile entro le tempistiche indicate, necessarie per ricevere l'articolo dai nostri fornitori e preparare la spedizione.
Nota: La disponibilità prevista fa riferimento a singole disponibilità.
Prenotazione libri scolastici
Il servizio ti permette di prenotare libri scolastici nuovi che risultano non disponibili al momento dell'acquisto.
Attualmente non disponibile
L'articolo sarà disponibile ma non sappiamo ancora quando. Inserisci la tua mail dalla scheda prodotto attivando il servizio Libraccio “avvisami” e sarai contattato quando sarà ordinabile.
Difficile reperibilità
Abbiamo dei problemi nel reperire il prodotto. Il fornitore non ci dà informazioni sulla sua reperibilità, ma se desideri comunque effettuare l'ordine, cercheremo di averlo nei tempi indicati. Se non sarà possibile, ti avvertiremo via e-mail e l'ordine verrà cancellato.
Chiudi
|
Descrizione
The Book of Ash and Bells begins in the aftermath of truth breaking open beneath Oakhaven. The hidden witness chamber has been shattered. Jonan is dead. His name, once buried beneath fear and controlled history, is now being whispered in alleyways, spoken in marketplaces, and punished in public by the Crown. The city should be changing, but instead it is closing in on itself. Bells ring from the registry towers. Wardens move through the streets. The authorities call memory a contagion. And Oakhaven, as always, is being taught to fear the truth before it can learn to bear it.
But something older than the Crown has begun to answer.
When strange response bells sound across the city, Lucen, Elara, Maraen, and Selyn discover that Oakhaven's towers were never only towers. Beneath the visible city lies another network: hidden bell chambers, witness routes, ash books, signal lines, old confirmation points, and buried civic machinery built long ago to preserve truth when power became hostile. The systems now used by the Crown to detect and crush dissent were once part of a deeper design meant to protect names, testimony, and public correction.
At the heart of Book Two lies south return—an unfinished corrective sequence tied to ancient frauds, altered grain counts, false death records, erased lineages, and judgments that were never fully restored. What the city buried was not only evidence of wrongdoing. It buried the method by which truth was meant to be spoken back into civic life.
But the old correction did not simply fail. It was interrupted at the point where truth became dangerous.
Long ago, a witness stood at the edge of restoring judgment and refused to complete a peace built on lies. Instead of allowing the city to soften truth into shared sorrow and false mercy, consent was withdrawn and the return was suspended. That refusal became one of the most important hidden inheritances in Oakhaven. It survived not in one official archive, but in fragments scattered through the lives of ordinary people—through widow instruction, funeral slips, burden language, children's teaching, household repetition, and whispered moral forms carried by those the city never thought important enough to watch.
Now Bell Office is learning to read those patterns.
As searches spread from towers to districts, from hidden rooms to family lines, Selyn becomes the living point of danger in the city's struggle. Marked by witness, she risks being treated not as a person, but as a vessel for an unfinished correction she never chose. Yet this is not a story about a chosen heroine surrendering herself to destiny. It is a story about refusing that pattern. It is about consent, burden, and the moral difference between witness and sacrifice.
As Lucen and the others race through hidden chambers, old grain quarters, widow courts, and fever archives, they begin to uncover a larger truth: Oakhaven is not only hiding its past. It has forgotten how to hear judgment without turning it into false peace. The danger is no longer just the Crown's lies. The danger is that even the innocent may choose shared grief over naming the guilty because it feels holier, safer, and easier to survive.
That is what makes The Book of Ash and Bells deeper than a hunt for records or a chase through underground routes. It becomes a battle over whether a city can be prepared to hear the truth before the truth is restored. The real task is no longer just finding what was buried. It is rebuilding the moral conditions under which the buried can return without destroying the witness, protecting the guilty, or repeating the old fracture.
Dark, politically charged, and rich with hidden-city tension, The Book of Ash and Bells expands the world of The City of Witness into something larger, more dangerous, and more haunting. It is a story of buried judgment, broken public memory, civic corruption, living archives.
|
|
|
|