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The Society of Unknowable Objects

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The Society of Unknowable Objects

By: Gareth Brown
Narrated by: Olivia Vinall
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Brought to you by Penguin.

Get ready to be spellbound by the new, fantastical novel from the Sunday Times bestselling author of fantasy sensation The Book of Doors . . .


The world of unknowable objects - magical items that most people have no idea possess powers - has been quiet for decades . . .

But three current members of a secret society have remained watchful, meeting every six months in the basement of a bookshop in London. They are pledged to protect their archive of magical items hidden away, safe from the outside world - and keep the world safe from them. But when Frank Simpson, the longest-standing member of the Society of Unknowable Objects, hears of a new artefact coming to light in Hong Kong, he sends the Society's newest member, author Magda Sparks, to investigate.

Within hours of arriving in Hong Kong, Magda is facing death and danger, confronted by a professional killer who seems to know all about unknowable objects, specifically one that was stolen from him a decade before. Magda is forced to flee, using an artefact that not even the rest of the Society knows about.

Returning to London, Magda learns hers is not the only secret being kept from the other two members. And that the most pernicious secret is about the nature of the Society’s mission. Her discoveries will lead her on a perilous journey, across the Atlantic to the deep south of the United States - not in pursuit of an unknowable object, but an unknowable person: the killer she first faced in Hong Kong. In doing so, Magda begins to understand that there are even more in the world who are chasing these magical items, and that her own family’s legacy is tied up in keeping all these secrets under wraps.

Magic has always been too powerful to reveal to the world. But Magda will learn there might be something even more powerful: the truth.

'A dazzling, globe-trotting thriller with a spectacular dash of magic. Like Michael Crichton at his finest, but with fantasy. Brilliant stuff!' SUNYI DEAN, bestselling author of The Book Eaters

© Gareth Brown 2025 (P) Penguin Audio 2025

Contemporary Crime Thrillers Fantasy Mystery Paranormal Paranormal & Urban Thriller & Suspense Urban Emotionally Gripping Magic China

Critic reviews

The Society of Unknowable Objects is a dazzling, globe-trotting thriller with a spectacular dash of magic. Like Michael Crichton at his finest, but with fantasy. Brilliant stuff! (SUNYI DEAN, author of The Book Eaters)
Huge fun; a fast-paced globetrotting tale.
Endlessly inventive, Brown transports the reader to new worlds filled with adventure and magic. (A. J. WEST, author of The Betrayal of Thomas True)
The Society of Unknowable Objects utterly demolishes the difficult second book syndrome. A thrilling, globe-spanning adventure that wrong footed me at every turn, and like The Book of Doors, features a truly memorable villain. (ADAM SIMCOX, author of The Dying Squad)
Filmic, fast paced and brilliantly imaginative, Gareth Brown’s The Society of Unknowable Objects is a thrilling read that will leave you eager for the next instalment of this hugely entertaining fantasy series. (ANITA FRANK, author of The Good Liars)
Fantastical . . . so begins this quirky adventure with echoes of 'Raiders of the Lost Ark' and The Da Vinci Code.
A fast-paced flight of magic, mystery and whimsy, whisking readers on an around-the-world adventure alongside a lovable cast of characters tasked with protecting the world’s most valuable secret — and perhaps keeping a few secrets of their own. (NIKKI ERLICK, author of The Measure)
The Da Vinci Code meets magic in a rollicking tale of secrets and espionage. I loved the international settings, the diverse cast of characters, the edge-of-your-seat plot . . . a pacy, action-packed joy of a read! (FIZA SAEED McLYNN, author of The Midnight Carousel)
Gripping, fantastical story . . . whisking readers from a cosy bookshop in London to the bustling cityscape of Hong Kong to a forgotten town in the deep south of America. It’s full of impossible magic, damning secrets and ordinary characters wrestling with extraordinary objects. But the best element of this story is its dark, cinematic heart, which explores what happens when god-like power is placed in the wrong hands . . . Brown weaves an intriguing mystery.
Brown’s propulsive plot and plucky heroine keep the pages turning. It’s good fun.

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This second book of the magical world of Gareth Brown reminds me of the style of Dan Brown's Robert Langdon series: similar structure, fast-paced, suspenseful, and surprising outcomes. Gareth Brown can really be the next best-selling adventure/suspense/treasure-hunting fiction writer.
I particularly love the friendship between an older man and a younger woman. In The Book of Doors, the old man offers the young woman help purely out of kindness. In this book, an old man, Frank, nurtures a young woman, Magda, because he saw her grow up and was a friend of her mother's, although, I disagreewith the way Frank handles things. This give me hope again about friendship between man and woman with a huge age gap.
I feel bad for Lukas just like I feel bad for the Woman in the 1st book. I wish there were better ways to handle their situations. But maybe they are foreshadowing for the next book of the series. I really look forward to it.
I am not too happy with the narrator. She sounds almost the same for everyone she does. I wouldn't be able to make out who's talking if I did not read the book at the same time. And she can't do American southern accent, although at the end, she did Cassie's voice just fine. If it weren't for the good story, she would have put me to sleep and made me return this title. I had to returned a title she narrated because the story was painfully slow and her narration was lifeless, her voice put me to sleep. Miranda Raison is SOOOO MUCH BETTER. Please let her narrate Brown's every title.

Gareth Brown's second hit

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