"After decades of children's stories with adult intelligence, Sachar has given us an adult novel with a child's heart. The Magician of Tiger Castle is a medieval fable for the modern age: wise and whimsical, tragic and comic, familiar and strange. I loved it." —Alix E. Harrow, New York Times bestselling author of Starling House
"Louis Sachar weaves a tale that's both timeless and brand-new. Clever, wistful, and lovely in equal measure, this is the kind of book that lodges itself in your heart!"—Sarah Beth Durst, New York Times bestselling author of The Spellshop
“There’s a feeling you have as a reader when you step into the hands of a master. Every Sachar book has this—a sense of competency and certainty. ‘Trust me, this is going to all make sense soon.’ Well, I trusted, and the story of The Magician of Tiger Castle came together so beautifully, I wept at the end. It was everything I wanted and more. I laughed, I cried, I clapped with joy and wonderment in the middle of a coffee shop. I could not put the pages down, and now that I’m finished, I am heartbroken the journey is over. I adored this book. It is undoubtedly a new favorite, perfect for fans of Holes—or for any reader who wants to go on a grand, magical adventure for the sake of true love.”—Susan Dennard, New York Times bestselling author of The Witchlands series
“While keeping the heart and humanity of Holes, Louis Sachar blazes into the adult space with The Magician of Tiger Castle. In a tale centuries old, the reader stands beside Anatole, a court magician, as he is swept into kingdom politics and moral decisions. Sachar paints a stunning story from the perspective of an immortal destined to observe…and the consequences when he decides to intervene.”—Rebecca Thorne, USA Today bestselling author of Can’t Spell Treason without Tea
"[A] melancholy, heartfelt, and utterly immersive Renaissance-esque fantasy. . . .There’s a lovely sparsity to Sachar’s fairy tale–esque prose that belies the careful scaffolding underneath, which sketches out a gentle love story and offers fascinating commentary about the fallibility of received wisdom, the nature of memory, and the lost histories of common people among the more publicized narratives of monarchs. Readers who grew up with Sachar will be especially thrilled, but even those new to his work won’t be able to put this down." —Publishers Weekly (starred review)