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Summary
Summary
From the remarkable imagination of acclaimed artist Jim Di Bartolo and the exquisite pen of bestselling author Kiersten White comes a spellbinding story of love, mystery, and dark conspiracy.From the remarkable imagination of acclaimed artist Jim Di Bartolo and the exquisite pen of bestselling author Kiersten White comes a spellbinding story of love, mystery, and dark conspiracy, told in an alternating narrative of words and pictures.Cora and Minnie are sisters living in a small, stifling town where strange and mysterious things occur. Their mother runs the local boarding house. Their father is gone. The woman up the hill may or may not be a witch.Thomas and Charles are brothers who've been exiled to the boarding house so Thomas can tame his ways and Charles can fight an illness that is killing him with increasing speed. Their family history is one of sorrow and guilt. They think they can escape from it . . . but they can't.Arthur is also new to the boarding house. His fate is tied to that of Cora, Minnie, Thomas, and Charles. He knows what darkness circles them, but can't say why, and doesn't even know if they can be saved.
Reviews (5)
School Library Journal Review
Gr 7 Up-In an inspired collaboration, White, author of urban fantasies and all things paranormal, pairs up with artist Di Bartolo to create a dark, moody, and mysterious hybrid novel. The story consists of alternating narratives, one in prose and one in vividly colored, sometimes horrific wordless graphic novel panels. It isn't immediately apparent if or how the two narrative threads are related. That fact alone might keep readers turning pages. White's story is about two sisters, Cora and Minnie, who live with their mother in a boardinghouse in Maine. After spying on the town witch and getting caught, Cora blames herself for the death of her father the next day. When a mysterious stranger, Arthur, comes to board, along with two brothers from New York, Minnie involves them in the folklore of their sleepy Maine resort town, only to discover that they are in an evil place, surrounded by watchers, and in more danger than she could have ever thought possible. What do you do when the web you weave ensnares not only the people you love, but the people and things you should fear the most? Di Bartolo's stunning artwork takes readers across the globe and spans from the turn of the 20th century to the present. While not for strictly linear thinkers, this absorbing tale will reward patient readers with a thrill of an adventure. Upon completion, teens will find themselves thumbing through it all over again, if only to put together the pieces of the puzzle that Di Bartolo keeps in the shadows throughout this eerie volume.-Meg Allison, The Moretown School, VT (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Publisher's Weekly Review
Di Bartolo follows Lips Touch: Three Times-his acclaimed 2009 collaboration with his wife, Laini Taylor-with a project that gives him more scope for story. The creators are, in the main, handling separate narratives, with the possibility that some readers won't recognize any connection until the end. Di Bartolo provides a horror-tinged adventure and White (Paranormalcy) a horror-tinged romance centering on Arthur, a mysterious young man who, in 1899, fetches up at the Johnson Boarding House with a heavy suitcase and heavier heart. He stays longer than planned, charmed by sisters Minnie and Cora Johnson. The arrival of two summer visitors precipitates a crisis that sends Arthur on a quest to lift the curse haunting him. Di Bartolo's images are silent stills, occasionally suffering from a lack of pacing that dialogue would have provided. Likewise, the finely detailed, single-scene development of White's text can be overshadowed by the instant impact of the pictures. For readers who can find their own balance between the two, it's an intriguing, many-faceted tale. Ages 12-up. Agent: (for White) Michelle Wolfson, Wolfson Literary Agency; (for Di Bartolo) Jane Putch, Eyebait Management. (Apr.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Horn Book Review
Prose alternates with long stretches of illustrated pages in this historical fantasy set in Maine centering on five teens at a resort boardinghouse. Witches, demons, and the undead vie for attention with family curses and budding romances. The vibrant but uneven illustrations at first seem extraneous to the story, but persistent readers will discover they're all part of the puzzle. (c) Copyright 2014. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Kirkus Review
Teens square off against sinister immortals in an overstuffed muddle presented, Hugo Cabretstyle, through an alternating mix of prose and wordless visuals. White's prose, created in collaboration with Di Bartolo, puts generic elements and character types together for a slow-moving tale featuring a set of bored undying. They have gathered in a small Maine town in 1900 to move the caged demon that keeps them alive to a new hidden location, in the process menacing a clutch of teenage residents. The creators offer no historical background or specific agenda for the bad guys, aside from just continuing to live. They are pursued across the decades by Arthur, dedicated to their destruction. Di Bartolo's wordless graphic panels chronicle that quest, which takes Arthur over continents and through the 20th century into the 21st. Readers are likely to find themselves more confused than enthralled. The graphic panels are interspersed in short, episodic sections from the very beginning so that readers will have no idea how they are connected to the text until links are supplied many pages later. Moreover, the art is drawn and colored in a loose, blurry way that makes recurring figures hard to recognize (Arthur has a facial scar, but that's no help since he doesn't acquire it until late in the prose story), and many discrete incidents are often so compressed that the graphic portion frequently feels more like a sketchy storyboard than a story. Ambitious but a failure both as a whole and in its parts. (Graphic/fantasy hybrid. 12-14)]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
*Starred Review* Maine. 1900. Five teens are living in a boardinghouse beneath a hill at the top of which stands a witch's home. Attracted one evening by the sound of music, the five Thomas and his desperately ill brother, Charles; sisters Cora and Minnie, whose mother owns the boardinghouse; and mysterious Arthur arrive at the witch's abode. While peering in the windows, they see the witch wildly dance and then to their horror hang herself. Running for help, they return with the deputy sheriff to find her gone. What has happened? Could it involve the three strangers who have come to their town: two men the sinister Alden and his ominous, bearded companion and the elegant woman who accompanies them? What is Arthur's dark secret? And what on earth is the Ladon Vitae? These questions and more drive the tantalizing mystery that unfolds in two twinned stories: one told in the intriguing text by author White, and the second told in artist Di Bartolo's wordless, enigmatic images that are interspersed throughout the narrative. The result is an enthralling, page-turning gothic mystery infused with hair-raising horror. The well-written words harmonize perfectly with the lushly executed, haunting images that, at first, seem to have nothing to do with the textual story but are gradually revealed to be an integral part that, ultimately, brings light to the darkest of shadows.--Cart, Michael Copyright 2010 Booklist