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Darkwater

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
It is a life-changing deal—and it will end your life as you know it.
 
Sarah Trevelyan would give anything to regain the power and wealth her family has lost, so she makes a bargain with Azrael, Lord of Darkwater Hall. He will give her everything she needs to restore the Trevelyan name, and one hundred years to do it—in exchange for her soul. Fast-forward a hundred years to Tom, who dreams of attending Darkwater Hall School. A professor named Azrael offers him a bargain. Will Sarah be able to stop Tom from making the same mistake? Catherine Fisher's version of Faust is utterly spellbinding!
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    • Kirkus

      October 1, 2012
      A slim, elegant retelling of the classic Faustian fable, with an inspirational twist. Victorian adolescent Sarah may be a menial drudge, but she never forgets that she is also the last of the arrogant aristocratic Trevelyans, now fallen into shameful penury. So she cannot refuse Lord Azrael, the current owner of her ancestral Darkwater Hall, when he offers proper work, real learning and even a chance to win back everything her family lost; all she has to risk is her soul. One hundred years later, Tom is another destitute and bullied teen, who would give anything to attend the elite school at Darkwater Hall--anything but the ghostly presence of his twin brother, Simon. When he meets a weird (but oddly mature) girl named Sarah, she warns him away from the new teacher, Azrael--who has just tempted Tom with the education he craves. While not as dense or subtle as her more recent work, this reissue of an early Fisher novel displays her spare lyrical prose and evocative sense of place. (This is its first U.S. publication.) The characters may be paper-thin and their motivations opaque, but they serve as effective players for a morality tale. Readers acquainted with Goethe, Milton or alchemical lore will be rewarded by a plethora of allusions both obvious and sly; but even those unfamiliar with the legendary source material will appreciate the layered symbolism and uplifting message. A dark but graceful parable of temptation, pride, revenge and hope; ideal for classroom reading. (Fantasy. 11-16)

      COPYRIGHT(2012) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • School Library Journal

      December 1, 2012

      Gr 9-11-Impoverished after her grandfather waged a losing bet 15 years earlier, 16-year-old Sarah Trevelyan must scrub latrines to feed her sick father. The Trevelyans' ancestral portraits cover the grim hallways, but Darkwater Hall is now owned by Azrael, the mysteriously youthful man who won the fateful coin toss. He offers Sarah employment in its massive library, and the teen is overjoyed at the chance to learn. Sarah becomes immersed in the dark world until Azrael offers her a deal-the reinstatement of Darkwater Hall to the Trevelyans in exchange for her soul. Helpless, Sarah agrees to his terms. Flash forward 99 years and 11 months to modern-day Darkwater Academy where a hopeful student, 15-year-old Tom, is dogged by bullies and shadowed by the ghost of his dead twin. When Tom is seduced by the un-aged Azrael's offer of a job in the lab, who should reemerge but Sarah Trevelyan, also un-aged and determined to prevent the boy from making the same mistake she did. Fisher does a lot right in this Dickensian tale as she spins a spooky story and portrays a ghastly mansion that readers can just about touch, taste, and smell. Yet the characters fall short, and the break midway through this already short tale to switch perspectives and centuries doesn't help. Allusions to biblical stories may be above readers' heads. A book for those who really love atmospheric tales with literary quality.-Tara Kehoe, Plainsboro Public Library, NJ

      Copyright 2012 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      September 1, 2012
      Grades 7-10 Fisher turns from dystopian futures (Incarceron and Sapphique, both 2010) to haunted boarding schools with equally skilled construction. In Victorian England, 16-year-old Sarah Trevelyan and her ailing father have lost their family estate, Darkwater Hall, to Lord Azrael, the hall's new master. The enigmatic Azrael offers Sarah the chance to regain her family's position and home, and 100 years of unlimited resources to make up for the many misdeeds the Trevelyans have visited on the villagers. She will not age, but when the time's up, she'll have to give up her soul. Fast-forward a century: 15-year-old villager Tom, haunted by his dead twin brother, Simon, dreams of attending the prestigious Darkwater Hall school. He meets Professor Azrael, who offers him admission at a steep price. Together, Sarah and Tom explore the haunted building and debate the Faustian bargains offered them. Atmospheric landscapes, fast-moving parallel plotlines, and thoughtful meditations on the nature of good, evil, mortality, loyalty, and sacrifice combine for a page-turner a cut above the usual ghost story. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Fisher's hit debut, Incarceron, garnered her plenty of fans, who will be keen to see what she's up to here.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2012, American Library Association.)

    • The Horn Book

      January 1, 2013
      Victorian girl Sarah, scion of a once-proud family, sells her soul for ownership of her birthright, Darkwater Hall, for a hundred years. At the close of that century (Sarah hasn't aged) she befriends (present-day) fifteen-year-old Tom; the two hurry to prevent the imminent loss of Sarah's soul. Plot and characters are skillfully developed and greatly enhanced by the aura of malevolence in Fisher's Faustian novel.

      (Copyright 2013 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • The Horn Book

      November 1, 2012
      Victorian girl Sarah Trevelyan, scion of a once-proud family, takes a position at Darkwater Hall in order to support her father, who lies dying in a small cottage in town, having refused to live in Darkwater Hall as anything but its master. As she helps the new owner, Lord Azrael, with his experiments in alchemy, she ignores the portentous warnings about his sinister identity. When she finally learns how her grandfather lost the grand estate to Azrael, Sarah bargains away her soul in exchange for ownership of the hall for a hundred years. As that century draws to a close -- a century in which the sixteen-year-old girl hasn't aged -- she befriends (present-day) fifteen-year-old Tom, who finds himself in a similar position: young, needy, and befriended by the new chemistry teacher at the school that Darkwater Hall has become. As Sarah and Tom confide in each other, they find themselves running out of time to thwart Azrael -- and prevent the imminent loss of Sarah's soul. The plot and characters are skillfully developed and greatly enhanced by the aura of malevolence that permeates the mood of Fisher's Faustian novel. jonathan hunt

      (Copyright 2012 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

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Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:4.1
  • Lexile® Measure:570
  • Interest Level:6-12(MG+)
  • Text Difficulty:2-3

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