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Endymion Spring

Endymion Spring isn’t your average mystery.

In the year of 1453, Gutenberg and his apprentice Endymion Spring are setting the type for the book they will be mass-printing. Gutenberg’s financier, Johann Fust, shows up, bringing with him a locked chest.

In present day Oxford, Blake Winters finds a blank book in a library. Marked “Endymion Spring,” the ancient book eventually shows him, and only him, a prophecy.

The story moves back and forth between 1453 and the present, slowly revealing everything. In the present, Blake searches for the Eternal Codex, a book containing all of history and future, the blank book pointing him toward it. Back in 1453, Endymion Spring hides the Codex to keep it out of the hands of Johann Fust, the investor who obtained the book through nefarious means, so as to have all of time’s knowledge.

Matthew Skelton, an expert on books and printing, has done an excellent job of merging fiction and history in Endymion Spring. It’s worth reading, especially if your addicted to books.



Comments

  1. Epsilion April 21st

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    Hello (if this goes to Matthew Skelton…) Matthew Skelton. If this is not to you…okay. I just wanted to say that I absolutely loved your book. At the end in author’s note or something, it said that it was based on a real story. Is that true? If so, is Endymion Spring a real kid (from history).

    Please contact back if you can. Thanks.

    -Me (Epsilion)


  2. wwwwwwws May 11th

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    This boook was the crappiest book I’ve ever read. Too much sub plots and worst Red Maple book there ever is.


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Matt

Blogger, web developer, reader of fantasy novels, ruler of the realm of NTugo.