The Grandest Game
od Jennifer Lynn Barnes z vydavateľstva Penguin Random House Children's UK 2024
The Grandest Game
od Jennifer Lynn Barnes z vydavateľstva Penguin Random House Children's UK 2024
Autor: | Jennifer Lynn Barnes |
Vydavateľstvo: | Penguin Random House Children's UK |
Rok vydania: | 2024 |
EAN: | 9780241672044 |
ISBN: | 978-0-241-67204-4 |
Počet strán: | 400 |
Typ tovaru: | Brožovaná väzba |
Jazyk: | anglický |
Rozmery: | 152x233x30 mm |
Žáner: | Dobrodružstvo, thrillery, Krimi, detektívky, YOLi, young adult, new adult, Angličtina (tituly v Anglickom jazyku) |
Vydanie: | 1 |
Viac o knihe The Grandest Game (Jennifer Lynn Barnes)
Get caught up in the puzzles, games, danger, romance, and riches of this lush new chapter in the #1 bestselling Inheritance Games saga. Seven tickets. An island of dreams. The chance of a lifetime. Welcome to the Grandest Game, an annual competition run by billionaire Avery Grambs and the four infamous Hawthorne brothers, whose family fortune she inherited. Designed to give anyone a shot at fame and fortune, this year's game requires one of seven golden tickets to enter. With millions on the line, those seven players will do whatever it takes to win. Some of the players are in it for the money. Some for power. Some for reasons all their own. Every single one of them has secrets. Amidst it all is Grayson Hawthorne, tasked with a vital role in this year's game. But as tensions rise and the mind-bending challenges push the players to their limits-physically, mentally, and emotionally-it soon becomes clear that not everyone is playing by the rules.
#1 New York Times bestselling author Jennifer Lynn Barnes delivers a brand-new series in the world of The Inheritance Games, where fan-favourite and new characters collide in a game you'll never forget. Do you have what it takes to play?
Extract from the book:
Out loud, Rohan opted for a different tactic. “We both know I’m a magnificent bastard.”
“You are everything I made you to be. But some things must be won.”
“I’m ready.”
Rohan felt the way he did every time he stepped into the ring to fight, knowing that pain was inevitable— and irrelevant.