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Summary
Summary
Welcome to your new school, Allie.
Welcome to your new life.
The gates locked into place with a shudder.
Allie Sheridan 's world has fallen apart. Her family's in tatters, school after school has kicked her out for bad behavior, and she's just been arrested. Again.
Sent away to a strict boarding school, Allie expects a prison. Instead, she finds Cimmeria Academy is something very different. Its students are an odd mixture of the gifted and the rich, though Allie is sure she is neither. Its rules are stern but arcane, and among its students is an elite group in a mysterious organization. They call it Night School.
Soon Allie finds that, especially at night, Cimmeria is alive with secrets. That everybody lies. And as the school begins to seem like a very dangerous place, she must decide who she can trust if she's going to find out what's really going on.
In Night School, C. J. Daugherty creates a world of stirring mystery, danger, romance, and thrills.
Reviews (4)
School Library Journal Review
Gr 8 Up-Rebellious London teen Allie Sheridan, 16, has just gotten arrested-again. It's the last straw for her parents, and Allie is shipped off to a mysterious boarding school, Cimmeria Academy. The institution caters to a select crowd of children from elite families; the protagonist has no idea why she's been sent to live among them. Nothing is what it seems at this old-fashioned academy and Allie will have to sort through the lies and dangers to discover the truth about the school, her classmates, and her own family. This supernatural thriller covers fairly well-trod ground: teen relationships, love triangles, and secrets. While the author evokes a suspenseful gothic-style tone, the novel fails to have the tight story arc and writing structure needed to maintain the spooky mood. The first in a series, this book serves to set up intrigue and introduce readers to the main cast of characters, but it leaves many questions unanswered. This title will appeal most to fans of Gabriella Poole's Secret Lives (Hodder & Stoughton, 2009) and Richelle Mead's Bloodlines (Razorbill, 2011).-Stephanie Whelan, New York Public Library (c) Copyright 2013. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Horn Book Review
Kicked out of many other schools, Allie Sheridan is new at Cimmeria Academy, a boarding school where technology is verboten, tradition is paramount, and secrets abound. When a tragedy is covered up, Allie must ascertain who's putting the students in danger and whom she can really trust. The plot's weak points are compensated for by strong character-building and narrative voice. (c) Copyright 2013. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Kirkus Review
A smart, engaging heroine and gripping, suspenseful plot trump this series opener's all-too-predictable romance. Angry and upset over the loss of her brother, Christopher, Allie's vandalism gets her expelled from school--again. Her exasperated parents pack her off to Cimmeria Academy, a boarding school in the remote English countryside. Puzzlingly, her classmates aren't troubled youth like Allie but the gifted offspring of wealthy families educated at Cimmeria for generations. Everyone, especially Allie, wonders why she's there--and why the school's hottest guys are smitten with her: smooth, uber-male Sylvain and smoldering, bad-boy Carter. Although readers can plot the triangle's romantic trajectory early on, other narrative twists and turns remain pleasurably unpredictable. Cimmeria's as much an enigma as its students. They're not to enter the woods after dark; computers and cellphones are forbidden. A few, Sylvain and Carter included, attend the mysterious Night School but refuse to discuss it. Even Allie's best friend, Jo, keeps secrets from her. Frustratingly, whenever love or attraction is in the air, Alllie's gutsy leadership dissolves into old-fashioned passivity (somewhere between Bella and Katniss on the heroine-autonomy spectrum). But when the summer ball ends horrifically, Allie's ready to take action. Hints of tantalizing plot twists to come will have readers panting for the next installment. (Romantic thriller. 14 up)]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
Only gutsy first-time novelists would tackle the well-worn sinister boarding school trope, complete with a troubled new girl navigating the social scene and various shadowy dangers. After all, where to go with such familiar ingredients? Yet Daugherty knows exactly where she wants to take us, and soon enough, readers will be hooked. The lean prose certainly helps, as does how the plot is punctuated by several unforgettable scenes of suspense, including a skinny-dipping escapade complicated by a panic attack and a rooftop encounter with a bottle of vodka that ends in . . . well, that would be telling. Connecting such episodes is protagonist Allie Sheridan's efforts to learn why she was admitted to such an elite institution, and about Night School, a shadowy training program within it. If initially some students seem stereotypical, keep reading: Daugherty is expert at revealing character through action. Similarly, Allie can appear too reactive, letting others rescue her but then she notes this tendency, thereby incorporating it into her character arc. Ultimately, both the story and the writing itself are full of surprises.--Gutierrez, Peter Copyright 2010 Booklist