The Key (Elfgren and Strandberg novel)
The Key (Swedish title Nyckeln) is the third and final part of Engelsfors, the young adult fantasy novel trilogy.[1]
Author | Mats Strandberg and Sara Bergmark Elfgren |
---|---|
Original title | Nyckeln |
Country | Sweden |
Language | Swedish |
Series | The Engelsfors Trilogy |
Genre | Young adult fiction, Urban fantasy, Horror |
Publisher | Rabén & Sjögren (Swedish), Random House (English) |
Publication date | 30 October 2013 |
Media type | Print (Paperback and hardback) |
ISBN | 978-1468306736 (hardcover) |
LC Class | PZ7.E386 Ke |
Preceded by | Fire |
Plot
After the battle in the gymnasium hall, the Chosen Ones are not sure how to handle the death of Ida. Unbeknownst to them, Ida is trapped with Matilda in the Borderland between life and death. After Viktor begged Minoo to save his sister Clara, the leader of the council's Swedish division, Walter, has realised Minoo's potential as a valuable pawn. The Chosen Ones that are still alive have no chance to recover, and no choice but to rally together to try to prevent the apocalypse — even while their personal dramas threaten to tear them apart.[2]
gollark: I'd partly agree, but that doesn't mean ALL ABSTRACTION is hard to use.
gollark: If we accept your ridiculous "simple to implement means easy" thing, then machine code is easier than assembly, and... CPU microcode? is easier than machine code.
gollark: Assembly is an abstraction over machine code.
gollark: Abstraction is maybe harder to *implement*, but easier to *use* once it works.
gollark: Programming the interpreters and compilers used for higher-level languages is hard, but once they work it's easy to *use* them.
References
- "World of Engelsfors". World of Engelsfors.
- Sara B. Elfgren (26 January 2015). "The Key". Risingshadow.
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