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A Skinful of Shadows Kindle Edition
Sometimes, when a person dies, their spirit goes looking for somewhere to hide. Some people have space within them, perfect for hiding
Young Makepeace has learned to defend herself from the ghosts that try to possess her in the night, desperate for refuge, but one day a dreadful event causes her to drop her guard. And now there’s a spirit inside her.
The spirit is wild, brutish, and strong, and it may be her only defense when she is sent to live with her father’s rich and powerful family. There is talk of civil war, and they need people like her to protect their dark and terrible family secret. But as she plans to escape and heads out into a country torn apart by war, Makepeace must decide which is worse: possession—or death.
“Darkly splendid . . . a wonderful, resonant narrative whose subtlety and insight will challenge, entertain and enchant.” —The Guardian
“A Skinful of Shadows is outlandishly creative and thoroughly blood-chilling. Her storytelling is visceral and unfurls at an exciting pace, making this novel a wonderful, weird and terrifying addition to her body of work.” —Shelf Awareness (starred review)
“A book that only Hardinge could write . . . [a] masterful and spooky historical fantasy.” —School Library Journal (starred review)
“Hardinge’s writing is stunning, and readers will be taken hostage by its intensity, fascinating developments, and the fierce, compassionate girl leading the charge.” —Booklist (starred review)
“Deliberate, impeccable, and extraordinary.” —Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
- Reading age12 - 18 years
- LanguageEnglish
- Grade level6 - 12
- Lexile measureHL800L
- PublisherAmulet Books
- Publication dateOctober 17, 2017
- ISBN-13978-1419733765
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Editorial Reviews
Review
" . . . a delicious combination of historical adventure, coming-of-age tale, and supernatural intrigue"―Publishers Weekly
**STARRED REVIEW**
"Hardinge's plot is both unpredictable and rock-solid, her settings full of smells, her imagery vivid . . . Deliberate, impeccable, and extraordinary."―Kirkus Reviews
**STARRED REVIEW**
"A Skinful of Shadows is outlandishly creative and thoroughly blood-chilling. Her storytelling is visceral and unfurls at an exciting pace, making this novel a wonderful, weird and terrifying addition to her body of work."―Shelf Awareness
**STARRED REVIEW**
"Hardinge’s writing is stunning, and readers will be taken hostage by its intensity, fascinating developments, and the fierce, compassionate girl leading the charge."
―Booklist
**STARRED REVIEW**"Hardinge continues to create multifaceted characters, well-researched historical settings, and laugh-out-loud dialogue that will enrapture strong readers of fantasy and complex historical fiction. VERDICT A book that only Hardinge could write; add this masterful and spooky historical fantasy to upper middle grade and YA shelves."―School Library Journal
**STARRED REVIEW**
"The visceral immediacy of Hardinge’s prose . . . can sometimes be unsettling, but the prose itself is always original and invigorating"
―The Horn Book
"The setting allows for plenty of action and intrigue . . . It all ends on a strange and bittersweet note, but Hardinge fans will be accustomed to that by now and will not be disappointed here."―The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books
"The novel is a very descriptive and craftily written . . . It would be ideal for tenacious students looking for a good ghost story."―School Library Connection
About the Author
Product details
- ASIN : B074QHGLDP
- Publisher : Amulet Books (October 17, 2017)
- Publication date : October 17, 2017
- Language : English
- File size : 3305 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Not Enabled
- Print length : 406 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #580,135 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- Customer Reviews:
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I’m not one for ghost tales in general, but this plot for this one tethered me.
A necromancy of a sort is practiced by a high holding family steeped with legacy and secrets. A young bastard girl is sucked into this family drama after losing her mother and sent to them, her fatherhood’s family.
A bubbling war bursts upon the country and matches the battles that have been simmering within the confines of the family’s estate. The girl has been kept more like a prisoner and house servant than any sort of family member. The war provides an opportunity to escape and along the way she learns some terrible family secrets that ignite the will to endure and rise above the curse of her family.
This author creates a new way to look at ghosts and spirits and the vessels that can store them. I would love to keep reading about the characters- even if some of the Puritan names drive me a little crazy.
The ending had all the feels and propped me up for more!
She definitely didn’t disappoint.
Hardinge knows how to tell a frickin story.
Just read it. I promise you won’t regret it.
Story (3/5): This ended up being a bit of a disappointment to me after reading “A Face Like Glass” and “Deeplight”. There are some neat ideas here and it is beautifully written but the story is really slow and I struggled to stay engaged in it. The story follows Makepeace who ends up at the estate of the Fellmotte family after the death of her mother. There she finds she is one of the few people who can be possessed by ghosts. The Fellmotte family are keeping Makepeace as a spare to hold the ghosts of the family. She ends up foiling all their plans as she flees across an England at war. The story ends up being sort of a cat and mouse chase and was devoid of a lot of the ingenuity I’ve seen in Hardinge’s other books.
Characters (3/5): While I admire Makepeaces’s determination and wits I never engaged with her all that well as a character. You don’t really get to know any other characters all that well aside from the ghosts that Makepeace shares her head with. Makepeace was okay but I never fell in love with her. This is one of those books where all of the characters are somewhat selfish and unlikable.
Setting (3/5): The other two Hardinge books I read were set in such amazing worlds that this setting was a bit of a let down. Yes, I guess it was decently done and the war torn English countryside was described well enough...but wasn’t really the point of the story. I am just so used to amazing world-building from Hardinge and there wasn’t really any world-building here. It was okay.
Writing Style (3/5): While parts of the book are beautifully written and lyricall and I did enjoy some of the psychological discussions, mostly this book is just slow. Makepeace chases and is chased by various Fellmotte’s all around England, it gets repetitive and boring. I almost stopped reading this a couple of times and in the end I don’t think finishing it really bought me much. The idea of transferring souls of the dead into people who can host ghosts is fascinating and makes for some interesting scenarios, but the overall plot was just too slow.
My Summary (3/5): Overall this was a disappointment for me. I was really looking forward to reading another Hardinge book, but maybe I just picked the wrong one here. I struggled with this some; it was boring and I didn’t like the characters. After being so impressed with “A Face Like Glass” and “Deeplight” I was just soooo sad I didn’t like this book more. I have both “The Cuckoo’s Song” and “The Lie Tree” to read as well, hopefully I will enjoy those books more.
Earlier this year, I read The Lie Tree, a historical fiction novel with the faintest element of fantasy that turned the whole story into a dark and compelling read. It was eerie and unsettling and captivating, and somehow, in a whole new setting and with new fantastic elements, Hardinge has managed to reproduce that odd feeling in A Skinful of Shadows.
I was worried going in. It opened rather stiffly, and almost religiously, a combination I’m not keen on. But so quickly, it shed that shell, moving away from purely historical 1640s England into an England with ghosts hungry for bodies to keep them from unraveling after death. It was not a novel about religion, written in inflexible prose. It unfurled into a novel about fighting back, fighting for the right reasons, blossoming into something completely unique.
I really wish I could be less vague. I do. But there’s something about the quality of the novel that’s so incredibly elusive to me, that I don’t think I could adequately describe to anyone but folks who’ve already read it. That’s unusual in itself, given that I’m not often at a loss for words. But I am here, happily so.
I really enjoyed the main character’s growth, from scared little girl afraid to stop running away to scared girl afraid to stop running but fighting nonetheless. Makepeace (yes, that’s her name) is a wonderful example of a character who grows and learns and makes mistakes and adapts. She’s in regular peril, but she clings to what advantages she has and takes what risks she’s ready for in the name of freedom. She’s resourceful and persistent, and moreover, she’s compassionate, a trait I admire a lot in characters faced with decisions that will ultimately put them between a rock in a hard place. She isn’t perfect and doesn’t pretend to be.
And the plot? Oh my goodness, does it move. I couldn’t believe how much was packed into this book, how it came full circle. I wish maybe that it had been a little less full, but at the same time, it was never dull, especially as it came closer and closer to the climax. Plus, I adored the fantasy element Hardinge introduced in the form of ghosts; this isn’t a high fantasy sort of novel. It remains historical fiction with a single paranormal addition that somehow complements the historic aspects in the oddest ways. It’s a clever, engaging blend, and I think by having only a single fantasy element, Hardinge managed to develop it fully and carefully, instead of getting too caught up in all manner of magics.
My only complaint was that the side characters fell flat, including the antagonists’ motives, which felt rather familiar in some ways. Nonetheless, I liked Makepeace and the overall plot well enough to overlook this and stick to it through the end, and I’m very pleased that I did. Its odd charm won me over thoroughly, and I suspect I’ll be looking for more of Hardinge’s work in the future. She has a gift I can’t articulate, and I’m thoroughly impressed.
Have you read A Skinful of Shadows or any other novel by Frances Hardinge? Do you get what I mean by that quality I just can’t seem to name? And if you haven’t, are you interested enough to give it a go? Also, what books have you loved that captivate you in ways you just can’t explain?
Top reviews from other countries
No matter how dark things get—and believe it, this story gets very dark and very creepy indeed—within the dark there is light, there is love and there is an underlying moral compass (and if ‘moral compass’ sounds pious, it’s not—here it’s a lively, intelligent, very practical thing). She explores the political machinations of the time and the ordinary people caught in the squeeze. The human relationships are complex, rife with tension and, as such, believable. She creates profound connections to the natural world without sentimentality. Makepeace’s poignant alliance with Bear, a case in point; as is the mouse in the graveyard. This book, like her others, stirs the emotions and challenges you to think. All these elements are seamlessly weaved into a great, exciting adventure—there’s no dearth of action. Makepeace is a scrappy, resilient heroine who has the wit to see what needs to be done and the gumption to do it, even when it terrifies her. You’re rooting for her all the way.
.
This is beautifully written, classic fiction. Not just for YA, but for those of us who have left our YA years far behind.
This book combines so many different topics (war, religion, the meaning of family, questions of identity) and at the same time manages to tell a gripping tale. I absolutely loved it.