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Mohrbooks Literary Agency
Sebastian Ritscher |
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Original language | |
English | |
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http://jaclynmoriarty.com |
A CORNER OF WHITE
Some books defy description. Some authors make us feel as though we are discovering stories for the very first time, and seem to be choosing their words from a secret stash. This is one of these books. Jaclyn Moriarty is one of these authors. A book that evokes superlatives: the vision is extraordinary, the writing is poetic, the characterization deeply moving.
Madeleine and her mother have run away from their former life, under mysterious circumstances, and settled in cramped quarters in a rainy corner of Cambridge, England (in our world). Madeleine’s mother, Holly, has begun to act in very odd ways. Elliot, on the other hand, is in search of his father who disappeared a year before, the same night his uncle was found dead by the side of a wintry road. The talk in the town of Bonfire (in the Kingdom of Cello) is that Elliot's dad may have killed his brother and run away with the town teacher, abandoning Elliot and his mom. But that is something he refuses to believe. And he is determined to find both his dad and the truth.
Madeleine and Elliot both begin to unravel their own mysteries in their own respective worlds, until the two are brought together when Madeleine finds a mysterious folded note in a parking meter. “Help me,” the note begins. “I am being held against my will.” She answers the note—and back in Bonfire, Elliot finds her reply. Thus begins an impossible correspondence. It is impossible because since 1666, the contact points between Cello and the World have been sealed, and it is strictly forbidden for a Cellian to interact with the World. Indeed, as far as Madeleine is concerned, Cello does not exist.
Through this strange, inexplicable gap between the two worlds, even greater mysteries unfold: Why are the violent, dangerous weather phenomena called “color storms” happening in Cello with ever increasing frequency? What is the connection between Madeleine and Isaac Newton, with whom she's developing a strange fascination? Is there any truth to the myth of the "Butterfly Child," a creature whose appearance could end the droughts of Cello? And will Madeleine and her friend Jack ever kiss?
Jaclyn Moriarty is the internationally bestselling and award-winning author of several books for young adults, including THE GHOSTS OF ASHBURY HIGH, FEELING SORRY FOR CELIA, THE YEAR OF SECRET ASSIGNMENTS, and THE MURDER OF BINDY MACKENZIE.
Madeleine and Elliot both begin to unravel their own mysteries in their own respective worlds, until the two are brought together when Madeleine finds a mysterious folded note in a parking meter. “Help me,” the note begins. “I am being held against my will.” She answers the note—and back in Bonfire, Elliot finds her reply. Thus begins an impossible correspondence. It is impossible because since 1666, the contact points between Cello and the World have been sealed, and it is strictly forbidden for a Cellian to interact with the World. Indeed, as far as Madeleine is concerned, Cello does not exist.
Through this strange, inexplicable gap between the two worlds, even greater mysteries unfold: Why are the violent, dangerous weather phenomena called “color storms” happening in Cello with ever increasing frequency? What is the connection between Madeleine and Isaac Newton, with whom she's developing a strange fascination? Is there any truth to the myth of the "Butterfly Child," a creature whose appearance could end the droughts of Cello? And will Madeleine and her friend Jack ever kiss?
Jaclyn Moriarty is the internationally bestselling and award-winning author of several books for young adults, including THE GHOSTS OF ASHBURY HIGH, FEELING SORRY FOR CELIA, THE YEAR OF SECRET ASSIGNMENTS, and THE MURDER OF BINDY MACKENZIE.
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Book
Published 2013-04-01 by Arthur Levine/Scholastic |
Book
Published 2013-04-01 by Arthur Levine/Scholastic |