The Blue Girl by Charles de Lint: Book Cover

    The Blue Girl by Charles de Lint

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    (Paperback - Reprint)

    • Age Range: Young Adult
    • Pub. Date: April 2006
    • 384pp
    • Sales Rank: 40,174

      Reader Rating: (49 ratings)

      Detailed Rating: "Just for Fun" See All

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      • Overview
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      Product Details

      • Pub. Date: April 2006
      • Publisher: Penguin Group (USA)
      • Format: Paperback, 384pp
      • Sales Rank: 40,174
      • Age Range: Young Adult

      Synopsis

      When Imogene, her mother, and her brother move to Newford, she decides to reinvent herself-this time she won't go looking for trouble. She quickly gets to know two very different people. Maxine is a "good girl," following a strict life plan. Imogene helps Maxine loosen up and break a few rules, and in turn Maxine keeps her on the straight and narrow. Imogene's other new friend is a little more unusual. His name is Adrian. He is a ghost. Adrian was killed when he jumped off the high school roof in 1998, and hasn't left since. He has a huge crush on her--so much so that he wants her to see the fairies that also haunt the school. The fairies invade Imogene's dreams, blurring the line between the unreal and the real. When her imaginary childhood friend Pelly actually manifests, Imogene knows something is terribly wrong. With Maxine, Adrian, and Pelly's help, Imogene challenges the dark forces of Faery. This compelling novel from Charles de Lint, the acknowledged founder of the "urban fantasy" genre, is set in the city of Newford, home to some of his best stories. After reading it, you will want to live in Newford, too.

      Annotation

      New at her high school, Imogene enlists the help of her introverted friend Maxine and the ghost of a boy who haunts the school after receiving warnings through her dreams that soul-eaters are threatening her life.

      Publishers Weekly

      De Lint (Moonheart) tackles magic and the afterlife in a suburban high school setting in this inventive if somewhat convoluted tale. Imogene Yeck is new to Redding High, and with her piercings and goth clothes, she immediately gets branded ("Yuck," a play on her last name). She quickly befriends an outsider of another sort, geeky and thoughtful Maxine. Imogene begins seeing a "pale, nerdy guy-sort of like a tall Harry Potter... but gawkier and with a narrower face," called Ghost, according to the school's legend. Imogene and Maxine learn that this is the ghost of Adrian, a bullied kid who "either jumped or fell off the roof" some years before. Adrian, who admires Imogene (for standing up to the bullying football quarterback), inadvertently attracts the attention of "the darkness," also called "ghost- or soul-eaters." She learns of this in part from her childhood imaginary friend Pelly, now an ominous figure who is appearing in her dreams. Fairies factor into the story, as does a roving angel who tries to convince Adrian to give up his hold on the world and "move on." The book feels a bit strained, packed with one mythology too many. It may also be challenging to some readers at first: the early clever repartEe between Imogene and Maxime gives way to three different first-person narratives (Imogene's, Maxine's and Adrian's), told at two different periods in time ("Then" and "Now"). Fantasy-minded goth kids, though, will likely find it worth the effort. Ages 12-up. (Nov.) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

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      Biography

      CHARLES DE LINT and his wife, the artist MaryAnn Harris, live in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. His evocative novels, including Moonheart, The Onion Girl, and Widdershins, have earned him a devoted following and critical acclaim as a master of contemporary magical fiction in the manner of storytellers like John Crowley, Jonathan Carroll, Alice Hoffman, Ray Bradbury, and Isabel Allende.

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      Customer Reviews

      I loved this bookkk!!!! C:by Anonymous

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      May 08, 2009: This book was extremely good! I like Pelly! i want one! I would read this again!

      De lint-by Solstice-Ballad

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      January 29, 2009: This was actually the only book by De Lint that I've really been intrigued by. I read the new one Dingo and it was o.kay.

      The Blue Girl's got her own charm though. De Lint has a thick writing style that kind of makes you work at it when you read, but this one was pretty good.

      I Also Recommend: In the Forests of the Night (Den of Shadows Series), The Hermit Thrush Sings, How I Live Now, Hunter's Moon (The Chronicles of Faerie Series), Need.


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