



The Phoenix Pencil Company
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- $16.99
Publisher Description
A REESE’S BOOK CLUB PICK
In this dazzling debut novel, a hidden and nearly forgotten magic—of Reforging pencils, bringing the memories they contain back to life—holds the power to transform a young woman’s relationship with her grandmother, and to mend long-lost connections across time and space.
Monica Tsai spends most days on her computer, journaling the details of her ordinary life and coding for a program that seeks to connect strangers online. A self-proclaimed recluse, she's always struggled to make friends and, as a college freshman, finds herself escaping into a digital world, counting the days until she can return home to her beloved grandparents. They are now in their nineties, and Monica worries about them constantly—especially her grandmother, Yun, who survived two wars in China before coming to the States, and whose memory has begun to fade.
Though Yun rarely speaks of her past, Monica is determined to find the long-lost cousin she was separated from years ago. One day, the very program Monica is helping to build connects her to a young woman, whose gift of a single pencil holds a surprising clue. Monica’s discovery of a hidden family history is exquisitely braided with Yun’s own memories as she writes of her years in Shanghai, working at the Phoenix Pencil Company. As WWII rages outside their door, Yun and her cousin, Meng, learn of a special power the women in their family possess: the ability to Reforge a pencil’s words. But when the government uncovers their secret, they are forced into a life of espionage, betraying other people’s stories to survive.
Combining the cross-generational family saga and epistolary form of A Tale for the Time Being with the uplifting, emotional magic of The Midnight Library, Allison King’s stunning debut novel asks: who owns and inherits our stories? The answers and secrets that surface on the page may have the unerasable power to reconnect a family and restore a legacy.
APPLE BOOKS REVIEW
Magical powers meet computer science in Allison King’s touching novel about the ways different generations connect. The narrative tells two interlocking stories across two timelines. One happens during World War II in Japanese-occupied Shanghai, where young cousins Yun and Meng are forced to use their unusual familial gift: the mystical ability to make a pencil stand up, take to the page, and reveal the last thing it was used to write. The other timeline follows Yun’s American granddaughter, a college student tech whiz named Monica, who’s trying to reunite the long-separated Yun and Meng, now in their nineties. King handles Monica and Yun’s drastically different voices beautifully, and a full cast helped us to feel totally immersed as their sagas intersect across decades and continents. With side quests ranging from romantic tension to the dangers of data mining, there are surprises around every bend. The Phoenix Pencil Company is an engrossing tale of legacy and memory, and how it all fits together.