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Revolution

Summary: An angry, grieving seventeen-year-old musician facing expulsion from her prestigious Brooklyn private school travels to Paris to complete a school assignment and uncovers a diary written during the French revolution by a young actress attempting to help a tortured, imprisoned little boy--Louis Charles, the lost king of France.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780375897603 (electronic bk.)
  • ISBN: 0375897607 (electronic bk.)
  • Physical Description: electronic resource
    remote
    1 online resource (471 p.)
  • Edition: 1st ed.
  • Publisher: New York : Delacorte Press, 2010.

Content descriptions

Bibliography, etc. Note: Includes bibliographical references.
Source of Description Note:
Description based on print version record.
Subject: Louis -- XVII, of France -- 1785-1795 -- Fiction
Grief -- Juvenile fiction
Emotional problems of teenagers -- Juvenile fiction
Dysfunctional families -- Juvenile fiction
Musicians -- Juvenile fiction
Diaries -- Juvenile fiction
France -- Juvenile fiction
Grief -- Fiction
Emotional problems -- Fiction
Family problems -- Fiction
Musicians -- Fiction
Diaries -- Fiction
Paris (France) -- Juvenile fiction
Paris (France) -- Fiction
France -- Fiction
France -- History -- Revolution, 1789-1799 -- Fiction
Genre: Electronic books.

Electronic resources


  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2010 October #1
    Donnelly follows her Printz Honor Book, A Northern Light (2003), with another gripping, sophisticated story, but this time she pairs historical fiction with a wrenching contemporary plotline. After her little brother's murder and her mother's subsequent breakdown, high-school-senior Andi feels like a ghost. She is furious at her father, a Nobel Prize–winning scientist with a 25-year-old pregnant girlfriend, when he arranges for Andi to join him in Paris: "Sure. My brother's dead. My mother's insane. Hey, let's have a crepe." In France though, Andi, a passionate musician, discovers a diary written during the French Revolution by a young woman with whom Andi develops an increasing fascination. Donnelly links past and present with distracting contrivances—culminating in time travel—that work against the novel's great strengths. But the ambitious story, narrated in Andi's grief-soaked, sardonic voice, will wholly capture patient readers with its sharply articulated, raw emotions and insights into science and art; ambition and love; history's ever-present influence; and music's immediate, astonishing power: "It gets inside of you . . . and changes the beat of your heart." Copyright 2010 Booklist Reviews.
  • BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2010 October
    A brother's death sets his sister adrift

    Andi Alpers is desperately sad—or perhaps just desperate. Ever since the death of her little brother, she's been adrift. Her mother has come unhinged, her dad has left his damaged old family for a new life, and Andi is barely holding it together. Only when she's playing her guitar does she feel sane. When she's warned that without a stellar senior thesis, she'll be expelled from her exclusive Brooklyn prep school, her father whisks her away to Paris, where he's investigating a 200-year-old genetic mystery.

    Andi's ostensibly there to do her own research on a remarkably prescient 18th-century composer and his musical heirs. But almost as soon as she arrives in Paris, she becomes far more invested in the city's history than she could have imagined. In an antique guitar case, she discovers an ancient diary written by a young woman very much like herself. Alexandrine Paradis was a performer, too, one who got swept up in revolution—and love—despite herself. As Andi reads Alexandrine's diary, she becomes more and more immersed in the drama of a dead girl and the little boy for whom she sacrificed everything.

    As in her previous novel for young adults, the award-winning A Northern Light, Jennifer Donnelly combines impeccable historical research with lively, fully fashioned characters to create an indelible narrative. Revolution is a complex story, moving back and forth in time and including allusions not only to historical events but also to literature (especially Dante's Divine Comedy) and to music from Handel to Wagner to Radiohead. Yet this undeniably cerebral book is also simultaneously wise and achingly poignant. Alexandrine writes in her diary, "After all the blood and death, we woke as if from a nightmare only to find that the ugly still are not beautiful and the dull still do not sparkle." Just as Alexandrine comes to terms with her country's dashed hopes, Andi must find a place where hope—and love—can flourish despite disillusion and despair.

     

    Copyright 2010 BookPage Reviews.
  • Horn Book Guide Reviews : Horn Book Guide Reviews 2011 Spring
    Wracked with grief over her younger brother's death, Brooklyn teen guitarist Andi accompanies her father, a world-renowned geneticist, to Paris. There she stumbles on the diary of an eighteenth-century girl caught up in the French Revolution. The parallel narratives intersect in an over-the-top time-travel sequence, which, though not totally convincing, adds to the novel's rich layers of political and cultural history. Copyright 2011 Horn Book Guide Reviews.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2010 October #1

    Andi Alpers, a 17-year-old music lover, is about to be expelled from her elite private school. Despite her brilliance, she has not been able to focus on anything except music since the death of her younger brother, which pushed the difficulties in her family to the breaking point. She resists accompanying her work-obsessed father to Paris, especially after he places her mentally fragile mother in a hospital, but once there works in earnest on her senior thesis about an 18th-century French musician. But when she finds the 200-year-old diary of another teen, Alexandrine Paradis, she is plunged into the chaos of the French Revolution. Soon, Alex's life and struggles become as real and as painful for Andi as her own troubled life. Printz Honor winner Donnelly combines compelling historical fiction with a frank contemporary story. Andi is brilliantly realized, complete and complex. The novel is rich with detail, and both the Brooklyn and Paris settings provide important grounding for the haunting and beautifully told story. (Fiction. 14 & up)

    Copyright Kirkus 2010 Kirkus/BPI Communications.All rights reserved.
  • Library Media Connection : Library Media Connection Reviews 2011 March/April
    Revolution is a fantastic blending of realistic fiction with historical fiction. Andi is devastated when her brother is killed. After her mother is committed for mental illness, Andi and her father go to Paris. Andi reluctantly begins doing research on her senior thesis, the musical DNA of French composer Amade Malherbeau. She finds a mysterious diary belonging to a servant of Louis Charles, son of Louis XVI. As she reads the story of this 18th century girl, Alex, she begins to come to terms with her own grief. In a well written climax, Andi pulls herself out of the depths of despair with the help of a new French friend, Virgil, and by finishing her thesis and understanding the message of Alex's diary. This is a strongly plotted, character-driven novel. Even though she starts out as a spoiled private-school brat, Andi becomes a real three dimensional character. The story of Alex and the little prince is equally mesmerizing. Because of references to Dante and some fairly heavily music l expository passages, this book will not be for everyone, but those who "get it" will not want to put it down. Highly Recommended. Robin Henry, Library Media Specialist, Wakeland High School, Frisco, Texas ¬ 2011 Linworth Publishing, Inc.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2010 September #2

    Donnelly (A Northern Light) melds contemporary teen drama with well-researched historical fiction and a dollop of time travel for a hefty read that mostly succeeds. Andi Alpers is popping antidepressants and flunking out of her Brooklyn prep school, grieving over her younger brother's death. She finds solace only when playing guitar. When the school notifies her mostly absent scientist father that she's flirting with expulsion, he takes Andi to Paris for Christmas break, where he's testing DNA to see if a preserved heart really belonged to the doomed son of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette. Andi is ordered to work on her senior thesis about a (fictional) French composer. Bunking at the home of a renowned historian, Andi finds a diary that relates the last days of Alexandrine, nanny to (you guessed it) the doomed prince. The story then alternates between Andi's suicidal urges and Alexandrine's efforts to save the prince. Donnelly's story goes on too long, but packs in worthy stuff. Musicians, especially, will appreciate the thread about the debt rock owes to the classics. Ages 14–up. (Oct.)

    [Page ]. Copyright 2010 PWxyz LLC
  • School Library Journal Reviews : SLJ Reviews 2010 September

    Gr 9 Up—Andi Alpers's younger brother died two years ago and his death has torn her family apart. She's on antidepressants and is about to flunk out of her prep school. Her mother spends all day painting portraits of her lost son and her father has all but disappeared, focusing on his Nobel Prize-winning genetics work. He reappears suddenly at the beginning of winter break to institutionalize his wife and whisk Andi off to Paris with him. There he will be conducting genetic tests on a heart rumored to belong to the last dauphin of France. He hopes that Andi will be able to put in some serious work on her senior thesis regarding mysterious 18th-century guitarist Amadé Malherbeau. In Paris, Andi finds a lost diary of Alexandrine Paradis, companion to the dauphin, and meets Virgil, a hot Tunisian-French world-beat hip-hop artist. Donnelly's story of Andi's present life with her intriguing research and growing connection to Virgil overshadowed by depression is layered with Alexandrine's quest, first to advance herself and later to somehow save the prince from the terrors of the French Revolution. While teens may search in vain for the music of the apparently fictional Malherbeau, many will have their interest piqued by the connections Donnelly makes between classical musicians and modern artists from Led Zeppelin to Radiohead. Revolution is a sumptuous feast of a novel, rich in mood, character, and emotion. With multiple hooks, it should appeal to a wide range of readers.—Eric Norton, McMillan Memorial Library, Wisconsin Rapids, WI

    [Page 150]. Copyright 2010 Reed Business Information.
  • Voice of Youth Advocates Reviews : VOYA Reviews 2010 December
    The book begins with Andi and some of her classmates at the weekly Friday morning breakfast party, where each gets high in her or his own way before heading to school. Oh, no! Not another teen-angst tale! While it is that, it is so much more. Andi Alpers is a senior at St. Anselm's, a prestigious private school in Brooklyn, New York. Her seven-year-old brother, Truman, was killed in a traffic accident two years earlier, and Andi blames herself because she was supposed to be looking after him. She lives with her artist mother in an apartment, and her father, a Nobel-prize-winning geneticist who left after his son's death, is now involved with a much younger woman. Andi's grades have slipped in all her classes except music, which, along with antidepressants, is her escape. She has managed to keep her academic and emotional problems from her mother, who is suffering in her own way, continually painting portraits of Truman. Andi arrives home one evening to find her father waiting for her. He has his wife admitted to a psychiatric hospital and informs Andi that she will be accompanying him to Paris for her winter break and working on the outline for her senior thesis. In Paris, Andi is given an old guitar wich contains diary that belonged to Alexandrine Paradis, daughter of a family of entertainers. As Andi becomes engrossed in the diary, she becomes more and more interested not only in doing research for her thesis about an eighteenth-century French composer named Amadé Malherbeau but also in a young French musician she meets in a club This relatively hefty volume might not work for the readers of Lurlene McDaniel, but give it to those who love Gregory Maguire or Libba Bray.—Marlyn Beebe 5Q 5P S Copyright 2010 Voya Reviews.
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