Persistence of Memory by Amelia Atwater-Rhodes

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(Library Binding)

  • Age Range: Young Adult
  • Pub. Date: December 2008
  • 224pp
  • Sales Rank: 810,237

Reader Rating: (45 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Characters" See All

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: December 2008
    • Publisher: Random House Children's Books
    • Format: Library Binding, 224pp
    • Sales Rank: 810,237
    • Age Range: Young Adult

    Synopsis

    Sixteen-year-old Erin Misrahe just wants to be like everyone else in her new school. But Erin has more to worry about than passing AP Chemistry or making friends. In times of stress, she has always been overcome by her alter ego, Shevaun, whose violent behavior wreaks havoc on those around her. Erin can never remember anything about these episodes, and she’s grateful to have been spared them for a while.

    But when a protective friend comes back into Erin’s life, he insists that Shevaun is a vampire who actually exists apart from Erin. Shevaun has dangerous allies, like the handsome witch Adjila—and they’re determined to sever Shevaun’s connection to Erin once and for all.


    Children's Literature

    For years Erin has been in and out of psychiatric facilities, battling her severe schizophrenia and an alter ego who is violent enough to stick "a pencil through a nurse's hand." But now that she has been mainstreamed, she is more determined than ever to remain in a real high school. Watching as her friend Marissa turns into a giant cat, Erin believes that she is losing ground against her illness. Waking, she finds herself in a vampire's body somewhere in France. What she still doesn't realize is that this alter ego is not just in her head, but Shevaun is a real person, centuries old. Furious that she shares a connection with the teen, Shevaun and her lover, Adijla, and the two young vampires she has taken under her wing head to Massachusetts to find Erin and destroy the connection and possibly Erin with it. Erin, unwilling to recognize her powers, is protected only by her romantic interest from the psych ward, Sassy, a compulsive liar and shape-shifter who takes the form of a hyena. It is Adjila who finally discovers the source of the women's connection, which proves to potentially deadly for both Erin and Shevaun. Atwater-Rhodes explores a deeper, more psychological side of the underworld inhabited by vampires and other mysterious creatures. Her skilled writing takes the reader to unexpected corners of the characters' minds, usurping the reader's skepticism and doubt. Reviewer: Kristy Lyn Sutorius

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    Biography

    Amelia Atwater-Rhodes wrote her first novel, In the Forests of the Night, when she was thirteen-years-old. She has since published Demon in My View, Shattered Mirror, Midnight Predator, all ALA Quick Picks for Young Adults, Hawksong, a School Library Journal Best Book of the Year and VOYA Best Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Horror List Selection; Snakecharm; and Falcondance.


    From the Hardcover edition.

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    Customer Reviews

    Confusing but Worth Itby StifledLaughter

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    June 15, 2009: While the book had it's confusing turns and back-tracks, switching between minds, it was still worth the read. Fans of the author's books are more likely to understand it, given that there are subtle references to her other works in here that help slightly with background. It felt like slogging through muddle at some points but quickly picked back up again later.

    Worst vampire book ever!by QueenoftheReich_613

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    May 29, 2009: I do admire most of Rhodes's work, but this one was severely disappointing. This girl thinks she's mentally ill, but when meeting with an old friend, she realizes something far more dark than she imagined. Honestly, this book went N-O-W-H-E-R-E! I would skip 2-3 chapters ahead, and they would still be talking about the same thing! The female antagonist is far too plain, and just the same as most of her other vampire characters in previous works. This was very disappointing from a good author. Don't waste your time.


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