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When 15-year-old Amy convinces her mother to take her to their ancestral home on a remote Scottish island, she doesn't understand what that entails. After meeting her formidable grandmother, she learns that young members of her family are book jumpers, magically enabled to enter into any book and then observe and interact with the characters. Introduced to the Secret Library, she begins to explore The Jungle Book and then tries Oliver Twist. Her adventures take a dark turn when fictional objects disappear from their literary worlds, and the body of Sherlock Holmes washes up on shore. While Amy and her allies try to catch the culprit, she wonders whom to trust. A German writer, Gläser populates the island with eccentric characters and creates a centuries-old backstory of two rival families on the island. Amy makes a sympathetic, articulate narrator. Combining fantasy, history, mystery, adventure, and romance, the novel tries to accomplish a great deal in one volume and occasionally falters. Still, the concept is intriguing, particularly for book-lovers, and certain readers will find the story compelling.
Horn BookGerman author Gldser's appealing premise--a hero who jumps into books to solve the mysterious destruction of beloved literary worlds--is both charming and ultimately disappointing. The literary tales Amy visits, including Shakespeare's, Barrie's, Austen's, and Kipling's, collide in an odd mishmash of moods and styles. Some elements, including the secret of Amy's parentage and her relationships with other book jumpers, need further development.
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)Fifteen-year-old Amy Lennox has grown up in Germany, but after a traumatic spring she talks her mother into taking them back to her birthplace, the island of Stormsay off the coast of Scotland. Amy-s family and another clan, the Macalisters, are keepers of a secret library of texts that date back centuries, and they can -jump- into stories, interacting with their characters, so long as they stay -in the margins, between the lines.- But a thief is also jumping into books and stealing the authors- ideas, ruining the books. Amy and Will Macalister try to solve the mystery before more stories are destroyed. Amy also learns the identity of her father in a less-developed story line. The lore of the two families and German author Gläser-s descriptions of Stormsay and the library are meticulous and moody, creating a gothic atmosphere that serves this star-crossed love story well. Meetings with book characters, like Kipling-s Shere Khan and Dickens-s Oliver Twist, offer entertaining moments that balance the grimmer elements of the story as it builds to a bittersweet ending. Ages 12-up.
Gr 7 Up-At the beginning of this fantasy, Amy and her mother leave Germany for Lennox House, their ancestral home on the Scottish island of Stormsay. Amy's mother left long ago when she was pregnant with Amy, and she has recently broken off an affair with a married man. Meanwhile, Amy has endured bullying at her school, and after a picture of her without her bikini top in the locker room is posted on the Internet, she longs even more to get away. Once at Lennox House, Amy makes a startling realization: she and her family are book jumperspeople who enter books and engage with the characters inside. This should be a delightful discovery for Amy, who adores reading. However, a malevolent monster has awoken, and stories are being destroyed. It is clear that book jumping is no longer safe, but still, the stories must be protected. After Sherlock Holmes washes up dead and a tiny little princess turns out to be much more than she seems, it is up to Amy and her new friend, Will, another book jumper, to defend the stories. With numerous references to classics, from The Jungle Book to Pride and Prejudice , the novel sparks curiosity about literature and, perhaps, will encourage teens to track down the works mentioned here. Some readers may find the quick switches between Amy's perspective and a third-person narrator's point of view occasionally jarring, but many will connect with the tale of family secrets and new powers and will want to race to the end to learn the monster's identity. VERDICT This offering is the first U.S. title from an award-winning German author and would be a good additional purchase for fans of Cornelia Funke's Inkheart or Kristin Kladstrup's The Book of Story Beginnings . Deanna McDaniel, Genoa Middle School, OH
ALA Booklist
Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books
Horn Book
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
School Library Journal
Wilson's High School Catalog
Wilson's Junior High Catalog
In this English translation of the hit German young adult novel from Mechthild Gl ser, each book is its own world--with its own dangers. Can a young girl navigate these new worlds and get out alive? Amy Lennox doesn't know quite what to expect when she and her mother pick up and leave Germany for Scotland, heading to her mother's childhood home of Lennox House on the island of Stormsay. Amy's grandmother, Lady Mairead, insists that Amy must read while she resides at Lennox House--but not in the usual way. It turns out that Amy is a book jumper, able to leap into a story and interact with the world inside. As thrilling as Amy's new power is, it also brings danger: someone is stealing from the books she visits, and that person may be after her life. Teaming up with fellow book jumper Will, Amy vows to get to the bottom of the thefts--at whatever cost. Praise for The Book Jumper "The lore of the two families and... descriptions of Stormsay and the library are meticulous and moody, creating a gothic atmosphere that serves this star-crossed love story well." ? Publishers Weekly Praise for The Book Jumper German Edition: "Suspense, action, love and humor: As a reader one wishes one could plunge into the world of books like Amy " -- Bookmark Magazine "Exciting and imaginative, not just for young readers." --Andrea Wedan, Buchkultur "Mechthild Gl ser is bursting with ideas--this book is a firework." --Tanja Lindauer, Eselsohr