Publisher's Hardcover ©2021 | -- |
Counterrevolutionaries. Fiction.
Social classes. Fiction.
Hope diamond. Fiction.
Love. Fiction.
France. History. Revolution, 1789-1799. Fiction.
Great Britain. History. George III, 1760-1820. Fiction.
Claudie resigned herself to a life running her father's inn a long time ago, knowing her younger sister was the one who would attract the suitors. When Paris is thrown into revolution, she doubts it will come to her small community. So when the uprising, and all the violence and destruction that come with it, does reach her, she must make quick decisions about how to keep her sister safe, where her loyalties lie, and what to make of her attraction towards a stranger who came into her life at the moment her world was turned upside down. The Diamond Keeper is an interesting look at the French Revolution through the eyes of counterrevolutionaries. Claudie is a compelling protagonist because she can understand the motivations driving different sides of the revolution while still puzzling out which side speaks to her. This pulse-pounding piece of historical fiction will appeal to fans of adventure and romance. Pair this with Madame Tussaud's Apprentice (2014), by Kathleen Benner Duble, for another nuanced look at the French Revolution.
Kirkus ReviewsFrench counterrevolutionaries attempt to finance war with the French Blue, one of Louis XIV's crown jewels.While most of France is rocked by revolution in the autumn of 1792, rural Brittany, where 19-year-old Claudie helps her harsh father run a village inn, is quiet until postman Jacques Lambert brings news that the crown jewels have been stolen. Claudie views her younger, prettier sister Mathilde's infatuation with Jacques with a mix of distrust, envy, and resignation-her plain face and strong build mean her father wants to keep her for her labor. A few days later, their peaceful world is destroyed: Fleeing aristocrats take shelter at the inn, and the revolutionaries pursuing them burn the building down and go on a killing spree. Then Claudie discovers a large blue diamond and, dreaming of a normal life, travels to England with it on a risky secret mission. In reality, the gem resurfaced some 20 years later, recut as the Hope Diamond; Mobley's story fills in the gaps enticingly. Claudie and Mathilde, in particular, are very finely drawn, with both girls able to make believable leaps from countryside to high society. The arc of the plot does falter at the end, however. Characters read as White; the Chevalier d'Ãon, a real gender-nonconforming person from history, plays an interesting supporting role.Compulsively readable, credible, and fun. (historical note) (Historical fiction. 12-18)
School Library Journal (Wed Dec 01 00:00:00 CST 2021)Gr 9 Up Mobley's latest work of historical fiction centers on a perilous adventure during the French Revolution. At 19, Claudie feels trapped by a tedious, white, working-class destiny, laboring in her father's inn. Abandoned by her mother and abused by her father, she sees herself as unmarriageablea plain, "sturdy" girl, unlike her pretty little sister Mathilde. However, everything changes for Claudie when she and her sister find themselves in the middle of a scheme to steal the crown jewels from the leaders of the French Revolution. Readers will appreciate Claudie; she's a strong character who gradually grows in confidence even as she falls in love with Yannig, a staunch royalist. This well-researched story offers a unique glimpse of the French Revolution from the perspective of the women who acted as spies, messengers, and planners behind the scenes. By reimagining the theft of the French crown jewels, this book brings to life an often unseen side of the revolution outside of Paris. VERDICT Recommended for readers of historical fiction who appreciate strong female leads and stories with elements of adventure, spy craft, and romance. Talea Anderson, Washington State Univ., Pullman
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Kirkus Reviews
School Library Journal (Wed Dec 01 00:00:00 CST 2021)
A thrilling tale of the elusive Hope Diamond's journey across Europe during the French Revolution, with gorgeous, absorbing writing from Jeannie Mobley!
Eighteen-year-old Claudie Durand's future is planned. She'll take over the family inn, watch her much prettier younger sister, Mathilde, married off to the butcher's son, and live out her days alone, without the hope of finding a love of her own. Her mother ran off to the cloister when she was young, and her gruff, abusive father has deemed her unmarriageable, a nuisance, and only good for hard labor.
But outside their small village in Brittany, a revolution is brewing. When the Army of the Republic seizes their town, and Claudie finds herself at the center of the conspiracy, she and Mathilde must flee their sheltered life and take up a cause that, up till now, had always seemed like a distant conflict. As the sisters carry out a dangerous mission for the resistance: delivering a precious item to the mysterious Rooster of Rennes--Claudie's conscience is torn between the longing to return to her predictable, lonely existence and the desire to carve out a new future, reaching for the life--and love--she never dared dream of but knew deep down she truly deserved.