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Summary
Summary
Modern-day teenagers meet a palace of terrors locked up since the French Revolution in this surprising and haunting thriller from Stefan Bachmann, the internationally bestselling author of The Peculiar and The Whatnot. A Drop of Night will thrill fans of Neal Shusterman and Jessica Khoury.
Seventeen-year-old Anouk has finally caught the break she's been looking for--she's been chosen to participate in an exclusive program that includes an all-expense-paid trip to France and a chance to explore the hidden underground Palais des Papillons, or Palace of Butterflies. Along with four other gifted teenagers, Anouk will be one of the first people to set foot in the palace in more than two hundred years. Bachmann's masterful scene-building alternates between Anouk's flight through the palace and the struggles of Aurelie, who escaped the French Revolution by fleeing into the Palais des Papillons in 1792.
Reviews (4)
School Library Journal Review
Gr 9 Up-Seventeen-year-old Anouk has been chosen for an amazing opportunity: along with four other teens, she has received an all-expenses-paid trip to France, where she will be one of the first people in over 200 years to enter the Palais du Papillon-the Palace of the Butterfly-which was built underground. But soon after arriving in France, Anouk becomes suspicious. Something is very wrong, both with the people who chose her and with the palace itself. Woven throughout Anouk's story is the tale of another teen. Aurélie du Bessancourt, eldest daughter of the Marquis du Bessancourt, who lives under the reign of Louis XVI. When the townspeople march on Versailles and the royal family flees to Paris, Aurélie and her siblings are taken to live in the palace her father built below their château. But upon arrival, Aurélie is confused. If the palace is for safety, why is she being separated from her sisters? Why is she confined to one apartment? And why won't her father visit? Smooth writing, an engaging plot, and only wisps of romance place this work's focus squarely on two headstrong and rebellious girls. Aurélie's account offers readers just enough information to build suspense throughout Anouk's tale, and with so many oddities, teens will have a hard time recognizing the true villain of the story. VERDICT For readers who like strong characters in a unique setting and prefer their horror with a streak of science fiction.-Maggie Mason Smith, Clemson University R. M. Cooper Library, South Carolina © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Publisher's Weekly Review
Bachmann (The Peculiar) moves from middle-grade to YA with an uneven horror/suspense novel. Anouk, 17 and angry, jumps at the chance to join what might be the archeological expedition of the century: the exploration of a hitherto unknown underground palace in France. She and four other teens have been chosen for the expedition by the mysterious Sapani family, which owns the rights to the palace. Running parallel to this narrative is the story of Aurélie, daughter of the nobleman who created the palace as a refuge from the French Revolution. For Aurélie, the palace was a place of terror, and those terrors prove every bit as real for Anouk, more than two centuries later. Bachmann's writing is as polished as in his earlier books-the violence is fittingly gruesome, the decadent and mazelike palace is gorgeously described, and Anouk has an engagingly snarky narrative voice. But the story itself can lose its way amid a lot of frantic running around pursued by half-seen monsters, all building to a fairly pulpy big reveal. Ages 13-up. Agent: Sara Megibow, KT Literary. (Mar.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Kirkus Review
Seventeen-year-old Anouk accepts an invitation to assist with an academic exploration of a 200-year old underground palace but instead finds herself trapped in an extensive and elaborate set of deadly underground rooms. Anouk's contemporary story intertwines with frequent flashbacks to the aristocratic family that built the underground palace at the time of the French Revolution. In that timeline, Aurlie and her sisters reluctantly descend to the recently completed palace when a mob of revolutionaries attacks their home in 1789. Now, Anouk and four other teens realize early that they've been recruited to a fraudulent project and that their captors intend to kill them. They race through the palace, each room adorned in almost carnival-like pre-Revolutionary dcor and most equipped with devious devices meant to murder them. One room shoots razors, another metal globes, and another contains blue containers that spew deadly gas. But why were they targeted for this particularly baroque murder? Bachmann keeps the pages turning with this thriller that, for most of the book, appears to have no explanation. Although he develops Anouk quite well as a lonely character who has been estranged from her wealthy family, her friends remain one-dimensional. The peculiar circumstances add to the strange atmosphere and also to the suspense, lending the book an appealing, unworldly quality. When the explanation finally arrives, it fits quite well with the odd atmosphere. Bizarre and hugely suspenseful. (Horror. 12-18) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
Anouk, an angry wunderkind, is one of five teenagers chosen to explore the underground Palais du Papillon (Palace of the Butterfly) outside of Paris, believed to have been built by eighteenth-century aristocrat Frédéric du Bessancourt. It quickly becomes apparent to the team, however, that they were lured there under false pretenses. Escape is imperative but means navigating an unmapped maze of rooms filled with lethal traps, or they will become part of a deadly experiment. Concurrently, Aurélie du Bessancourt, the aristocrat's eldest daughter, tells her own story from 1789 one of her family scrambling to enter the Palais, being held prisoner by her father and uncle, and her own attempt to escape. Anouk's and Aurélie's stories skillfully mirror each other and are engaging; however, they unexpectedly veer off into a futuristic sci-fi tale that pits technology against brain power and superhuman agility. While this may disappoint some readers, it is certain to please those who demand constant action blended with their historical fiction.--Fredriksen, Jeanne Copyright 2016 Booklist