Another book about thieves. :) Seems like I'm reading a lot of those lately.Gen likes to think of himself as a master thief. He can steal anything. Except himself out of the king of Sounis's prison. One day, the king's magus comes to pay Gen a visit. He wants him to steal something for him. A legendary stone, said to have been dipped in the water of immortality. It is said that whomever the stone is willingly given to is the rightful king or queen of Eddis and becomes immortal. Gen agrees (not that he has a choice), and so he, the magus, Pol, and the magus's two apprentices Ambiades and Sophos head out to only the Gods (and the magus) know where.
The Thief is now one of my favorite books, up there with Harry Potter, Twilight, Eragon, and the like. One of my friends recommended it after she had read it, as well as Queen of Attolia and King of Attolia. The Thief starts out like any other book. There's a main character, a problem, a journey, etc., etc. The journey takes up more than half the book, but if you can keep up and pay attention, you'll be rewarded in the end. From p. 155 to the end, there are at least seven different major twists in the plot and surprises. You won't believe who Gen really is.












A plane appeared at an airport. No one saw it arrive, except for Angela DuPre. It appeared out of nowhere, and when she boarded the plane to look for the pilot or the passengers, she discovered that there were no adults on board. Just 36 babies. Thirteen years later, Jonah and Chip both get strange messages in plain white envelopes saying, "You are one of the missing." One of the missing? Missing from where? And then Jonah's parents take him and his sister Katherine to the office of FBI agent James Reardon, who might have new information about Jonah's adoption. While they're there, Katherine takes pictures of some strange documents on Reardon's desk, documents titled "Survivors" and "Witnesses." Jonah's and Chip's names are both on the Survivors list. But what did they survive?
