Perma-Bound Edition ©2017 | -- |
Publisher's Hardcover ©2016 | -- |
Paperback ©2017 | -- |
Apprentices. Fiction.
Supernatural. Fiction.
Pharmacists. Fiction.
Friendship. Fiction.
Secret societies. Fiction.
Plague. Fiction.
Conspiracies. Fiction.
London. History. 17th century. Fiction.
Great Britain. History. Charles II, 1660-1685. Fiction.
Gr 4-8 This follow-up to The Blackthorn Key places readers right in the middle of the nastiest event the 1600s had to offer—the Black Plague. Not only are Christopher and his friends tasked with avoiding the deadly disease but they must also contend with the prophets, zealots, and frauds who seem to attach themselves to all tragic events. Sands's writing is gripping and expertly paced. The action spins with breathless twists and turns. The characters react logically without appearing clairvoyant. The deep understanding of herbs, mixtures, and remedies will inspire some and astound others. Christopher and his companions are relatable tweens. This story would make for a great fictional pairing in history class. VERDICT An excellent sequel. Readers who haven't yet discovered this series are in for a treat.— Chad Lane, Tulip Grove Elementary School, MD
ALA BooklistIn seventeenth-century London, no disease is more dreaded more dreadful an the Black Death, which claims thousands of victims each day. An ominous prophet in a bird-faced mask is having surprising luck at predicting who will die next, and quacks are peddling expensive fake cures all over the streets of the city. The most recent outbreak could not come at a worse time for young orphan Christopher Rowe, who recently inherited an apothecary shop upon the death of Gabriel Blackthorn, his good master. But in the quarantine, Christopher cannot get permission to reopen the shop. How will he survive? Well, Blackthorn has left a new series of challenging puzzles that may lead his young apprentice to a fortune . . . or to the fiercely sought cure for the plague. In this exciting sequel to the well-received The Blackthorn Key (2015), Sands once again mixes history, science, chemistry, and medicine to create a story that will draw in a broad audience of children.
Voice of Youth AdvocatesThis exciting second book in A Blackthorn Key Adventure series begins as the black plague returns to London. Christopher, an apothecary apprentice to the late Benedict Blackthorn, is still coping with the loss of his master and, unable to sell remedies as an apprentice, he struggles to survive. With rising death tolls and a mysterious prophet accurately predicting plague deaths, London slowly begins to devolve into a mass of desperation and panic. When a new apothecary arrives with proclamations of a cure, the citizens in London begin to gain hope and the apothecary chooses Christopher's closed shop to begin production. Curious about the ingredients of the cure, Christopher and his friends investigate and find themselves in a dangerous conspiracy that can only be solved by deciphering the right clues.Filled with action, puzzles, ciphers, and secret treasure, Mark of the Plague will have readers racing along with Christopher, searching for clues to solve the mystery before the plague takes them all. Set in the historical backdrop of London's final major plague during the mid-1600s, Sands accurately captures the fear of the outbreak and uses this fear to heighten the tension and urgency present in the mystery. Readers who like historical fiction or mystery adventure will find an engaging blend of both genres in this series.Jewel Davis.
School Library Journal Starred Review
ALA Booklist
Voice of Youth Advocates
CHAPTER
1
"THIS IS A BAD IDEA," Tom said.
He stared sidelong at the device at the end of the workbench, as though, if he looked at it directly, it might poke out his eyes.
"You don't even know what it does yet," I said.
He bit his lip. "I'm pretty sure I don't want to."
The contraption did look rather . . . well, odd. It was five inches tall, with a bulging top balanced over a narrow upright cylinder, wrapped tightly in folded paper. The upper part of the device balanced on three wooden prongs sticking out of the bottom. A wick of cannon fuse trailed from its end.
"It's like a mushroom," Tom said. "With a tail." He edged away from the workbench. "A flammable tail."
I couldn't help feeling slightly wounded. Odd or not, this device was the most important thing I'd ever made. All of the other equipment in the apothecary workshop--the ceramic jars, the molded glassware, the spoons and cups and pots and cauldrons--lay crammed on the side benches, cold and quiet. Only the faint scent of ingredients and concoctions lingered in the room. Even the giant onion-shaped oven in the corner was still. Because this was the creation that would save my shop.
I held it up with pride. "Blackthorn's Smoke-Your-Home! Guaranteed to . . . uh . . . smoke your home. Well, that advertisement needs work."
"Your brain needs work," Tom muttered.
Now that was going too far. "My inventions do exactly what they're supposed to."
"I know," Tom said. "That's the problem."
"But--look." I put my Smoke-Your-Home back down--gently--and showed him my design, sketched on an unrolled sheet of vellum.
"It's like a firework," I said, which in retrospect was probably not the best way to start.
Blackthorn's Smoke-Your-Home
Invented by Christopher Rowe, Apothecary's Apprentice
"You light the fuse at the bottom. The gunpowder in the lower part pops the top into the air. Then the second fuse makes that burst." I swept my arm over it like I was hawking silks at the Royal Exchange. "Fills any room with smoke to keep your family safe! Designed to help drive off the plague!"
"Uh-huh," Tom said. I think my theatrics made him less impressed. "Why is it full of flour?"
"That's the best part. Watch."
I went to the side of the workshop, where I'd stored the two sacks of flour I had left. I grabbed a handful of it and picked up the taper burning on the workbench. When I puffed the flour into it, it burst with a bright flash of flame.
"See?" I said. "It explodes. That's what blew up Campden's mill last summer. There was too much flour in the air."
Tom pressed his fingers to his forehead. "You based an invention on an exploding mill?"
"Well . . . it's less dangerous than gunpowder, right?" Tom didn't seem to think that was a selling point. "Anyway, when the flour explodes, it incinerates the sawdust and herbs, filling the room with smoke. And that smoke is the best thing we know of that will prevent you getting the plague. We can even make them to order, put whatever wood inside the customer wants."
"Why couldn't they just make a fire?" Tom said.
"You can't just light random fires around your house," I said.
"Yes, this seems much safer."
"It is," I insisted. "You just have to keep it away from curtains. And oil lamps. And pets. And--look, I'll show you."
Tom backed away. "Wait. You're not really going to set that off?"
"What else would I do with it?"
"I thought you were just playing a joke on me."
From high up on the ingredient shelves, a plump salt-and-pepper-speckled pigeon fluttered down to where I stood. She cooed.
"That's right, Bridget," Tom said. "Talk some sense into him."
Bridget pecked at the cannon fuse. She recoiled with a grunt and took off, wings flapping her up the stairs.
"See?" Tom ducked behind the workbench. "Even the bird thinks you're mad."
"You're going to regret this when I'm knee-deep in gold," I said.
Tom's voice called from behind the wood. "I'll take my chances."
I lit the fuse. I watched it crackle and spark, then joined Tom behind the bench. Not because I was worried, of course. It just seemed . . . prudent.
The fuse reached the bottom. For a moment, there was nothing.
Then the gunpowder ignited. There was a hissing, and sparks shot from the bottom. The cylinder popped into the air.
I pulled on Tom's sleeve. "It works! It works!"
Then the second charge began to burn. A thin, smoking flame rushed out of the bottom. Slowly, it tipped sideways. Then it rocketed through the door into the shop.
"Was that supposed to happen?" Tom said.
"Well . . . ," I said, but the correct answer was: no.
From the doorway to the shop came a flash. Then a BOOM. The boom was expected. The voice that followed it was not.
"AAHHHH!" it said.
Excerpted from Mark of the Plague by Kevin Sands
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.
Christopher Rowe is back and there are more puzzles, riddles, and secrets to uncover in this follow-up to the Indie Next pick The Blackthorn Key, which was called a “spectacular debut” by Kirkus Reviews in a starred review.
The Black Death has returned to London, spreading disease and fear through town. A mysterious prophet predicts the city’s ultimate doom—until an unknown apothecary arrives with a cure that actually works. Christopher’s Blackthorn shop is chosen to prepare the remedy. But when an assassin threatens the apothecary’s life, Christopher and his faithful friend Tom are back to hunting down the truth, risking their lives to untangle the heart of a dark conspiracy.
And as the sickness strikes close to home, the stakes are higher than ever before…