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		<title>Maggie Stiefvater's Blog</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 24 Nov 2009 04:25:07 -0800</pubDate>
		<title><![CDATA[LAMENT gets starred review from Publisher's Weekly, KLIATT, and Booklist!]]></title>
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				<b>Publisher's Weekly</b> (starred review) Lament: The Faerie Queen's Deception Maggie Stiefvater. Flux, $9.95 paper (336p) ISBN 978-0-7387-1370-0<br/><br/>YA readers searching for faerie stories will be happy to find this debut novel, an accomplished take on well-loved themes. Despite her immense talent, teenage musician Deirdre fights nausea-inducing anxiety every time she plays her harp in public. Enter handsome, romantic Luke at just the right moment: a stranger, he calms her before a major competition, performs a duet with her and together they win the grand prize. Deirdre can't help falling in love—only, why do four-leaf clovers keep appearing, and why does Luke keep throwing them away? And why does Deirdre's grandmother instantly express an aversion to Luke? Along with some familiar elements—ruthless faerie royalty, unsuspecting mortals targeted for their as yet unknown gifts, treacherous bargains—Stiefvater brings to her story several layers of romance, a knowledge of Irish music and a talent for plot twists. She is also unafraid of taking plot developments to their logical outcomes, even when they mar the characters' happiness. Vibrant and potent, her writing will hook genre fans. Ages 12–up. (Oct.)<br/><br/><b>Booklist</b> (Starred Review)   Lament: The Faerie Queen's Deception.<br/>Stiefvater, Maggie (Author)<br/>Oct 2008. 336 p. Flux, paperback,  $9.95. (9780738713700). <br/>Sixteen-year-old Deirdre Monaghan, a gifted harpist who regularly plays for weddings and other events, has the kind of stage fright that makes her physically ill before a performance, which is an inauspicious way to start a romance; but while vomiting before a competition a gorgeous boy comes into the restroom to hold her hair. He is Luke Dillon, a flautist who proceeds to accompany her in a truly stellar performance. As four-leaf clovers start appearing everywhere, Deirdre develops telekinetic powers and encounters strange, unworldly people who seem to bear her ill will. Her best friend, James, also a talented musician; her beloved grandmother; and her mother all are in danger, as Deirdre is targeted by the queen of Faerie. Deirdre eventually discovers that she is a cloverhand, a person who can see the denizens of faerie, and Luke, not the only immortal who has her in his sights, is a gallowglass, an assassin assigned by the queen of Faerie to kill Deirdre but who falls in love with her instead. This beautiful and out-of-the-ordinary debut novel, with its authentic depiction of Celtic Faerie lore and dangerous forbidden love in a contemporary American setting, will appeal to readers of Nancy Werlin’s Impossible and Stephenie Meyer’s Twilight series.<br/> <br/>— Diana Tixier Herald
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				posted by Maggie Stiefvater on November, 24
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