I'm sorry to hear that. But the smell will eventually go with some effort. Place the book open outside or near a window and it upside down so that it is standing on its covers with the pages hanging down between them (so it looks like a letter 'A'). Place a fan (non-heated) at the other side of the book so that the air blows down the centre of the book. Fan the pages a little bit before so that they aren't so pressed together and the air flow can get between them. You'll need to leave it a good long while (hours... all day?) and occasionally flip the pages around a bit. Don't open it wide! Leave it quite narrow - that's all you need and too wide will bend the pages.
Don't put the fan too close to the book or you could damage the pages! You just need slight airflow, nothing more. You even could use a warm fan but only on a very low setting and only plenty far back from the book - you don't want to warp the pages!
Something only smells because it is giving off chemicals that reach your nose. It is not possible for something to give off chemicals forever - eventually all smells will fade. You can speed this process up thousands of times over by doing what I suggest and letting it run for hours (but keep an eye on it that nothing is being damaged) and make sure it is pointing at a window.