- Mass Market Paperback: 256 pages
- Publisher: Pocket Star Books (Feb 2003)
- Language English
- ISBN-10: 0743456246
- ISBN-13: 978-0743456241
- Product Dimensions: 17.6 x 11.1 x 1.7 cm
- Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 2,997,332 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
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Cameron Dean is a football star at Globe University. His father is dead and his mother is shacking up with his father's sister (Aunt Claudia). Messed up as that is, he suddenly finds himself heir to four-billion dollars and a castle in Denmark. But he cant collect until his 21st birthday (just a few weeks away).
Cameron decides to invite the team (and their sweeties) to the castle for his birthday. Nearly a hundred people head out for the party including comic relief Rosenberg and Gyllenhal.
But the castle has a secret as Ophelia's ghost rises from her peat-bog grave intending to destroy all love in the castle and reclaim Hamlet (his soul is tied to Cameron's).
Ophelia is an interesting character as she finds herself able to possess the bodies of women. The side effect is that she is changed by them and begins to think in more modern terms (a clever trick by the author so he would not have to match her personality to Shakespeare's original).
Like the play it purports to be a sequel to, this book is a tragedy. But all of the cute little Shakespearian references were quite entertaining and while there is some gore involved, most of the imagery is more classic ghost tale.
I am looking forward to more in the series.
To start things off, well, this is suppose to be a YA book, right? Wrong. No YA book I have ever read has ever had so many f-bombs!!! In the first chapeter alone there are three or four. So the 12-16 crowd is out. Plus all the characterization is completely messed up. If they are following Hamlet then the relationships should be at least a bit similar. For example Ophelia's counterpart, Sophia. In Hamlet she is a faithful daughter, and a loving sister. In Hamlet 2: Ophelia's Revenge she is...well, a complete witch. The way she treats her brother alone keeps her from being at all what Ophelia was. And replacing the war issues with Football works a bit, except that the author over does it a bit. Having the Ghost of Hamlet's father appear in the end zone? COME ON!!! Ugh!!!
If you want a "so stupid its fun" type book pick this up, maybe. And the next book in this series worries me. A horror version of Midsummer's Night Dream? Why wouldn't they try and conquer an easier task, like say Hamlet or even The Tempest? Well if it is half as slow as this book, I will end up doing a Bard's Blood Bonfire.
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