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THE EXAMINATION

Bosse (Deep Dream of the Rain Forest, 1993, etc.) continues his series of vivid works of historical fiction in this story of two brothers traveling across Ming Dynasty China to pursue their destinies. Lao Chen is a young Confucian scholar headed for the ultimate glory of the palace examination and top-level civil service; Lao Hong, loyal and worldly younger brother, is determined to escort Chen to Beijing and the highest honors. Through his cunning, Hong acquires enough money to get the two brothers to Chengdu for the provincial examination, which Chen passes easily. From there they must travel the long and treacherous road to Beijing—over the Yellow River, through drought- plagued provinces—for the next stage of the test. In addition, each brother is carrying a secret missive—Chen's from his teacher for an ostracized inventor, and Hong's from one member of the subversive White Lotus society to another. The brothers are separated when their junk is captured by pirates, who discover Hong's letter and torture him to discover its meaning, but Hong escapes, finds Chen, and the brothers continue on their way. When Chen passes the municipal and then the palace examination, his future is secure, and Hong is finally free to seek his own fortune through a career in the military. Bosse renders a graphic picture of 16th-century China- -its violence, ceremony, scholarship, and strict class order—in this stimulating and timeless story. (Fiction. YA)

Pub Date: Oct. 1, 1994

ISBN: 0-374-32234-1

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 15, 1994

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PIRATES!

A rambling, romantic 18th-century tale features a teenaged British heiress who, along with her African half-sister, avoids Terrible Fate by becoming a pirate. In the wake of her father’s sudden death, Nancy finds herself hustled from comfortable Bristol to the family’s Jamaican sugar plantation, where she forms an alliance with Minerva, a strangely attractive body slave. Following the shocking discovery that her thoroughly vile brothers have sold her to cruel, swarthy ex-buccaneer Bartholome, Nancy stops the plantation’s vicious overseer from raping Minerva by blowing out his brains—whereupon both young women don men’s clothing and go to sea. Minerva and Nancy both demonstrate facility with fist, blade, and pistol as they survive storms, battle, attempted mutiny, leering suitors, and other hazards—climaxed by a confrontation with Bartholome, who pursues her relentlessly from the Caribbean to Madagascar. Minerva’s true identity comes out eventually, and in the end, both she and Nancy acquire suitable mates without losing their yen for adventure. An ambitious but fundamentally conventional tale, closer to Ann Rinaldi’s historical novels than the more rousing likes of Avi’s True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle. (Fiction. YA)

Pub Date: Oct. 1, 2003

ISBN: 1-58234-816-2

Page Count: 340

Publisher: Bloomsbury

Review Posted Online: June 24, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 15, 2003

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DATING HAMLET

OPHELIA’S STORY

The author of several “Sabrina the Teenage Witch” and “Mary Kate and Ashley” titles converts Shakespeare’s play into a frothy tale of colluding lovers with more than revenge on their minds. The plot follows its Elizabethan model reasonably closely—except that Hamlet’s gotten further with Ophelia than even Polonius suspects, both Ophelia (who sees the dead king’s ghost even before Horatio does) and her brother Laertes are in the know about Hamlet’s feigned madness, and with Ophelia supplying the necessary potions, everyone’s death except that of Claudius (and Polonius, but see below) is faked. In an artificial mix of antique and modern language—“I prefer we talk not on your nation of frailty and women, sir. In fact, I warn thee—go not there”—Ophelia recounts machinations of her own in support of Hamlet’s as she struggles, meanwhile, to fend off the leering advances of Horatio, Claudius, the guard Bernardo, and even, latterly, Fortinbras. Except for the jocular grave digger, who turns out to be Ophelia’s true father, all of the men here are such creeps that even Hamlet just seems the best of a bad lot. Consequently, despite sending the joyfully reunited lovers off at the end to Verona to visit Hamlet’s school buddy Romeo, Fiedler hasn’t transformed Tragedy into Romance, but into a heavy-handed tract on the battle of the sexes. (Fiction. YA)

Pub Date: Nov. 1, 2002

ISBN: 0-8050-7054-0

Page Count: 192

Publisher: Henry Holt

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 15, 2002

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