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Illyria

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Madeleine and Rogan are first cousins, best friends, twinned souls, each other’s first love. Even within their large, disorderly family—all descendants of a famous actress—their intensity and passion for theater sets them apart. It makes them a little dangerous. When they are cast in their school’s production of Twelfth Night, they are forced to face their separate talents and futures, and their future together. This masterful short novel, winner of the World Fantasy Award, is magic on paper.
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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from April 26, 2010
      In this enchanting fantasy with a romance far more taboo than the current spate of paranormal pairings, Madeline and Rogan are 14-year-old first cousins and deeply in love. Their great-grandmother was a famous actress and although her descendants have become increasingly staid, these two cousins have inherited her talent. One day, after making love for the first time, they discover, hidden in the attic of the family’s ancestral mansion, “a toy theater, made of folded paper and gilt cardboard and scraps of brocade and lace,” where, each time they visit it, the scenery and lighting have changed, among other curiosities (“Snow was falling. Not everywhere. Only behind the proscenium, on the tiny stage itself”). The cousins are cast in a high school production of Twelfth Night, one that shares the magic of the toy theater. Rogan, as Feste the clown, seems inspired but increasingly wild. It soon becomes clear that his love for Madeline is doomed to disappointment, if not tragedy. The edgy subject matter, explicit but not gratuitous, relegates this novel to mature readers, but it’s beautifully written, rich in theatrical detail and intensely realized characters. Ages 14–up.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from May 15, 2010
      Grades 10-1 *Starred Review* Growing up in 1970s Yonkers, Maddy and Rogan were called the kissing cousins of the Tierney clan. In a secret attic space, they find a toy theater, complete with lighting and stage effects that appear like magic, but no actors or audience. As their discovery stirs within them the desire to create, Aunt Kate, mysterious and unnaturally beautiful, brings their abilities to a boil. Determined to restore the familys long-abandoned theatrical heritage, Kate pushes Maddy and Rogan to nurture their gifts in the schools production of Twelfth Night. However, Rogans wild nature is ever at odds with his haunting, melodious singing voice, and Maddys glamour, no doubt the gift of their great-grandmother, an ing'nue of the stage, shines dimly in the brilliance of Rogans fey charms. Winner of the World Fantasy Award, Hands slim novella is sublime and daring; she makes no mystery about the nature of the 15-year-old cousins relationship. Its as sweet, sexual, obsessive, and devastating as any other first love. YA readers are entrusted with a narrative of burgeoning and squandered talent, unapologetic incest, familial decline on par with that of Faulkners Compson family, and a hard-won ending thats, at best, tenuously hopeful. The subtlety and raw ache of the prose, and the realistic portrayal of artistic lives, triumphantly heralds Hands arrival into youth fiction.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2010, American Library Association.)

    • The Horn Book

      July 1, 2010
      Hand's pungently atmospheric novel portrays illicit sexual love and theatrical talent as matters nearly sacred. Cousins Maddy and Rogan, plus glamorous Aunt Kate, are the last of their family's theatrical legacy. Rogan's otherworldly singing stuns audiences, but Kate chooses reliable Maddy for acting school in London, splitting the lovers. Romantic readers will be swept through the short novel in a single sitting.

      (Copyright 2010 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • The Horn Book

      July 1, 2010
      Hand's pungently atmospheric novel portrays illicit sexual love and theatrical talent as matters nearly sacred. The lives of cousins Maddy and Rogan have been entwined since birth, each the youngest of six children born to twin brothers. The Tierney family descends from "a line of performers stretching back to Shakespeare's day," but recent generations have forsaken acting for real estate money, so Rogan, Maddy, and glamorous Aunt Kate are the last of the theatrical legacy. The cousins are devoted to each other like two halves of a whole: "Rogan was darkness, I was light, and over the years the metaphor was extended to include just about every doomy literary reference you can imagine." In their attic hideaway, heady with marijuana smoke, candles, and sex, they discover a tiny toy theater alive with lights and glittery snow-setting the novel, tantalizingly, on the threshold of fantasy but not quite crossing over. In a school performance of Twelfth Night, Rogan's fey, otherworldly singing stuns the audience, but Kate chooses reliable Maddy for acting school in London, splitting the lovers and leaving ever-mysterious, "loose cannon" Rogan behind. Romantic readers will be swept through the short novel in a single sitting and will be left blinking in surprise at the solid world beyond the final page.

      (Copyright 2010 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

Formats

  • Kindle Book
  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:5.2
  • Lexile® Measure:790
  • Interest Level:9-12(UG)
  • Text Difficulty:3-4

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