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Soon after she, her mother, and her younger brother move into an old house in an area once known as Beggarsgate, sixteen-year-old Emily begins to have terrifyingly real visions of seventeenth-century London devastated by the plague.
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Edition Notes
"First published in Great Britain in 1996 as Here comes a candle to light you to bed"--T.p. verso.
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From Publishers Weekly
This well-researched but predictable time-travel novel, the British author's American debut, takes readers back to 1665 London, the site of a plague. After her parents' divorce, Emily, her brother and mother move to a ramshackle but historic row house on Hound Hill. Emily's peculiar visions begin when an oddly dressed, strangely formal boy named Seth comes to Emily's door, searching for his cat, and gives his address as her own. As Emily hears clanging bells at night, smells bitter tallow candles, meets crowds of beggars and confronts a supposedly extinct black rat in her chimney, she finally realizes what is immediately obvious to the reader: that she can perceive the events of another time and even visit 1665. But when the curator of the local history museum contracts the plague, Emily learns that others can see the former residents and that it may be dangerous to stay too long in the past. The premise of concurrent planes of time and space is compelling but not always consistent; Emily's longest encounter occurs while she is unconscious, but all others happen in parallel time. Ultimately this unevenness detracts from the momentum. The plague proves the story's most important character, and readers will remember more about the barbaric practices of locking families in their homes and the nightly collection of the dead in street carts than about Prince's cast or plot. Ages 10-up.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From School Library Journal
Grade 7-10-Sixteen-year-old Emily's world has been shattered by her parents' recent divorce and a move to a new neighborhood. She is depressed, failing at school, sullen, and withdrawn. Can the stress of her unwanted circumstances account for the things she's seeing and the voices she's hearing? At first there are just shimmers and whispers, but then she encounters an oddly dressed man in the alley behind her house. Later, while walking nearby, she suddenly finds herself on a torch-lit street and sees a crowd of beggars scurry away as a cart rumbles past with its plague-infested cargo of bodies. Emily has discovered what some of her new neighbors already know: the past is alive on Hound Hill. Prince skillfully builds the suspense as Emily tries to figure out what is happening to her. Threads from the past are deftly interwoven with the present, culminating in the teen's complete, though temporary, transition to 1665, the year of the Great Plague. The realistic descriptions of life during that precarious time are fascinating and eye-opening. Although Emily's bitter disappointment over her parents' divorce seems to be too easily resolved, this intriguing British import will satisfy fans of fantasy, mystery, and historical fiction.
Peggy Morgan, The Library Network, Southgate, MI
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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