Perma-Bound Edition ©2012 | -- |
Paperback ©2018 | -- |
Assassins. Fiction.
Death. Fiction.
Gods. Fiction.
Courts and courtiers. Fiction.
Brittany (France). History. 1341-1532. Fiction.
France. History. Charles VIII, 1483-1498. Fiction.
Gr 9 Up-Ismae Rienne, born with an ugly red scar, is believed to have been sired by Death himself, and, when she escapes from her abusive husband on her wedding night, she finds refuge in the convent of St. Mortain where handmaidens are prepared to carry out Death's wishes. Trained in poisons, weaponry, and the wiles of seduction, she is sent off to prove herself by posing as the mistress of Gavriel Duval, a Breton working against the French so that his sister Anne can rightfully be crowned Duchess of Brittany. The political intrigue and resulting betrayals that the teen witnesses lead her to denounce the treasonous chancellor, save Duval from the traitor's poison, and realize that she wishes to follow the teachings of the convent, not as an assassin, but as one who frees suffering souls in their final moments. Though in love with Duval, she recognizes her own worth and vows to be faithful to her mission, living a life dedicated not to vengeance, but to mercy. This is a rich portrayal of the complexities of courtly life in 15th-century Brittany, featuring explicit details of costume and custom and showing how the lives of royalty and those who served them intertwined. The short, well-paced chapters will leave readers breathlessly waiting for more. Ismae and Duval are particularly well drawn, and the many twists and turns that influence their relationship are both fascinating and believable. While the story is sure to resonate with adolescents who are intrigued by vampires, werewolves, and their cultures of death, the violence, the sexual references (including the description of Ismae and Duval's first sexual encounter), and the idea of training servants for Death are for older readers. The book is well written and filled with fascinating, complex characters who function realistically in this invented medieval world.— Nancy Menaldi-Scanlan, The Naples Players, FL
Starred Review for Kirkus ReviewsFiction and history coalesce in a rich, ripping tale of assassinations, political intrigue and religion in 15th-century Brittany. When the pig farmer who paid three coins to wed Ismae sees the red scar across her back, he cracks her in the skull and hurls her into the root cellar until a priest can come "to burn you or drown you." The scar shows that Ismae's mother poisoned her in utero; Ismae's survival of that poisoning proves her sire is Mortain, god of death. A hedge priest and herbwitch spirit Ismae to the convent of St. Mortain, where nuns teach her hundreds of ways to kill a man. "We are mere instruments of Mortain…. His handmaidens, if you will. We do not decide who to kill or why or when. It is all determined by the god." After Ismae's first two assassinations, the abbess sends her to Brittany's high court to ferret out treason against the duchess and to kill anyone Mortain marks, even if it's someone Ismae trusts--or loves. Brittany fights to remain independent from France, war looms and suitors vie nefariously for the duchess' hand. Ismae's narrative voice is fluid and solid, her spying and killing skills impeccable. LaFevers' ambitious tapestry includes poison and treason and murder, valor and honor and slow love, suspense and sexuality and mercy. A page-turner--with grace. (map, list of characters) (Historical thriller. 14 & up)
Starred Review ALA Booklist (Sun Jan 01 00:00:00 CST 2012)Starred Review In the late fifteenth century, Mortain, the god of death, has sired Ismae to be his handmaiden. She will carry out his wishes by working through the Convent, where she has found refuge from a brutal father and husband. After learning the Convent's wily warfare and womanly arts, and being apprenticed to Sister Serafina (poisons mistress and Convent healer), 17-year-old Ismae is sent to the high court of Brittany, ostensibly as the cousin (aka mistress) of the Breton noble Duval t, in truth, she is there as a spy. Her tacit assignment is to protect the young duchess by assassinating Duval if he proves to be a traitor, a charge made more difficult because of the couple's attraction to each other. LaFevers has written a dark, sophisticated novel true to the fairy-tale conventions of castles, high courts, and good versus evil, and spiced with poison potions; violent (and sometimes merciful) assassinations; subtle seductions; and gentle, perfect love. With characters that will inspire the imagination, a plot that nods to history while defying accuracy, and a love story that promises more in the second book, this is sure to attract feminist readers and romantics alike. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: With a $100,000 marketing campaign, including national print, online, and social-media outreach; a video trailer; and a vintage T-shirt promotion, the publisher is pushing LaFevers' novel in a big way.
Horn Book (Wed Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2012)Running from an arranged marriage, seventeen-year-old Ismae lands up at St. Mortain's convent, discovers she has special gifts (and that her true father is Mortain, the god of Death), and trains to become an assassin--the true vocation of a daughter of Death. This light romantic fantasy, set in an alternate, fictional, quasi-late medieval Brittany, might well appeal to fans of Libba Bray's Rebel Angels books.
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)Fiction and history coalesce in a rich, ripping tale of assassinations, political intrigue and religion in 15th-century Brittany. When the pig farmer who paid three coins to wed Ismae sees the red scar across her back, he cracks her in the skull and hurls her into the root cellar until a priest can come "to burn you or drown you." The scar shows that Ismae's mother poisoned her in utero; Ismae's survival of that poisoning proves her sire is Mortain, god of death. A hedge priest and herbwitch spirit Ismae to the convent of St. Mortain, where nuns teach her hundreds of ways to kill a man. "We are mere instruments of Mortain…. His handmaidens, if you will. We do not decide who to kill or why or when. It is all determined by the god." After Ismae's first two assassinations, the abbess sends her to Brittany's high court to ferret out treason against the duchess and to kill anyone Mortain marks, even if it's someone Ismae trusts--or loves. Brittany fights to remain independent from France, war looms and suitors vie nefariously for the duchess' hand. Ismae's narrative voice is fluid and solid, her spying and killing skills impeccable. LaFevers' ambitious tapestry includes poison and treason and murder, valor and honor and slow love, suspense and sexuality and mercy. A page-turner--with grace. (map, list of characters) (Historical thriller. 14 & up)
School Library Journal Starred Review (Sun Apr 01 00:00:00 CDT 2012)
Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books
Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews
Starred Review ALA Booklist (Sun Jan 01 00:00:00 CST 2012)
Horn Book (Wed Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2012)
Wilson's High School Catalog
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
Excerpted from Grave Mercy by Robin LaFevers
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.
set star] Fiction and history coalesce in a rich, ripping tale of assassinations, political intrigue and religion. . . . LaFevers' ambitious tapestry includes poison and treason and murder, valor and honor and slow love, suspense and sexuality and mercy. A page-turner--with grace. -- Kirkus Reviews , starred review Seventeen-year-old Ismae escapes from the brutality of an arranged marriage to the respite of the convent of St. Mortain. Here she learns that the god of Death has blessed her with dangerous gifts and a violent destiny. To claim her new life, she must destroy the lives of others. But how can she deliver Death's vengeance upon a target who has stolen her heart?