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The Splendor Falls

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Can love last beyond the grave?

Sylvie Davis is a ballerina who can’t dance. A broken leg ended her career, but Sylvie’s pain runs deeper. What broke her heart was her father’s death, and what’s breaking her spirit is her mother’s remarriage—a union that’s only driven an even deeper wedge into their already tenuous relationship.

Uprooting her from her Manhattan apartment and shipping her to Alabama is her mother’ s solution for Sylvie’s unhappiness. Her father’s cousin is restoring a family home in a town rich with her family’s history. And that’s where things start to get shady. As it turns out, her family has a lot more history than Sylvie ever knew. More unnerving, though, are the two guys that she can’t stop thinking about. Shawn Maddox, the resident golden boy, seems to be perfect in every way. But Rhys—a handsome, mysterious foreign guest of her cousin’s—has a hold on her that she doesn’t quite understand.

Then she starts seeing things. Sylvie’s lost nearly everything—is she starting to lose her mind as well?
"Lush with Southern atmosphere, The Splendor Falls expertly weaves together romance, tension, and mystery. Haunting and unforgettable!" —Carrie Ryan, bestselling author of The Forest of Hands and Teeth
"Sylvie's voice is sharp and articulate, and Clement-Moore . . . anchors the story in actual locations and history. . . . Her ear for both adolescent bitchery and sweetness remains sure, and her ability to write realistic, edgy dialogue without relying on obscenity or stereotype is a pleasure."-Publishers Weekly
"Long, satisfying and just chilling enough, this will please a wide audience and leave readers hoping for more."-Kirkus Reviews
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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 28, 2009
      Seventeen-year-old Sylvie has recently lost both her father and her nascent career as a ballerina. Sent to visit family in Alabama during her newly remarried mother’s honeymoon, Sylvie grapples not only with dislocation and grief, but with hallucinations—in Central Park, in the airport and in her family’s antebellum mansion, Bluestone Hill—that she cannot control or explain. Her cousin Paula, an old-school steel magnolia, is no comfort, but Sylvie finds warmth in the competing attentions of theTom Sawyeresque Shawn Maddox and Rhys Griffith, a visitor from Wales with secrets of his own. As Sylvie learns more about Shawn, Rhys and the history of Bluestone Hill, she finds strength to understand her family’s past and her own unsettling but hopeful future. Sylvie’s voice is sharp and articulate, and Clement-Moore (the Maggie Quinn: Girl vs. Evil series) anchors the story in actual locations and history, offering au courant speculations about the nature of ghosts and magic. Her ear for both adolescent bitchery and sweetness remains sure, and her ability to write realistic, edgy dialogue without relying on obscenity or stereotype is a pleasure. Ages 14–up.

    • Booklist

      September 15, 2009
      Grades 8-12 At 17, Sylvie Davis is already a professional ballerina, but a broken leg destroys her career. Her mothers honeymoon sends Sylvie from Manhattan to Alabama, where her deceased fathers cousin is restoring the familys ancestral home. Despite her pain, physical and emotional, her surroundings spark her. She feels a connection to the land, to her father, and to the mysterious history that surrounds the house. Theres also no denying the attraction between Sylvie and two young men, one from Wales working on a dig, the other a local boy whose family is intertwined with hers. But what disconcerts her most are the ghosts she both sees and feels. Unfortunately, the storys strongest points are buried in too many pages and in Sylvies habit of telling readers almost as much about her dogs reactions to events as her own. On the plus side, Clement-Moore provides an atmospheric tale with a complex heroine who clears the way for possibilities in her own life with as much determination as she clears her fathers garden.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2009, American Library Association.)

    • The Horn Book

      January 1, 2010
      Sylvie, a ballet prodigy who has just suffered a career-ending injury, is shuffled by her mother from New York to Alabama to live with her dead father's cousin. There she becomes embroiled in generations-old supernatural intrigue--and falls for a cute Welsh geology student up to his eyeballs in the mystery. Sylvie is a stubborn, relatable protagonist. The story's many-layered plot builds in suspense.

      (Copyright 2010 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

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  • Kindle Book
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Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:5.8
  • Interest Level:9-12(UG)
  • Text Difficulty:4

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