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The Book of Blood and Shadow Paperback – 19 Jan. 2012
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It was like a nightmare, but there was no waking up.
When the night began, Nora had two best friends and a boyfriend she adored. When it ended, she had nothing but blood on her hands. Chris was dead. Adriane couldn't speak. And Max, Nora's sweet, smart, soft-spoken Prince Charming, was gone. He was also-according to the police, according to her parents, according to everyone-a murderer.
Desperate to prove his innocence, Nora's determined to follow the trail of blood, no matter where it leads. But Chris's murder is just one piece in a puzzle that spans continents and centuries. Solving it may be the only way she can save her own life.
- Reading age12 years and up
- Print length448 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Dimensions13 x 3 x 19.6 cm
- PublisherATOM
- Publication date19 Jan. 2012
- ISBN-109781907411441
- ISBN-13978-1907411441
Product description
About the Author
Product details
- ASIN : 1907411445
- Publisher : ATOM
- Publication date : 19 Jan. 2012
- Edition : 0
- Language : English
- Print length : 448 pages
- ISBN-10 : 9781907411441
- ISBN-13 : 978-1907411441
- Item weight : 362 g
- Reading age : 12 years and up
- Dimensions : 13 x 3 x 19.6 cm
- Best Sellers Rank: 3,287,129 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- 65,383 in Literature & Fiction for Young Adults
- Customer reviews:
About the author

Robin Wasserman is the author of the novel GIRLS ON FIRE. Her writing has appeared in The New York Times, Tin House, The Los Angeles Review of Books, and several short story anthologies. A recent MacDowell Colony fellow, she is also the New York Times bestselling author of more than ten novels for young adults and teaches in the low-residency MFA program at Southern New Hampshire University.
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- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 9 February 2012Format: PaperbackWow, how much did I love The Book of Blood and Shadow by Robin Wasserman? I'd never read anything by Robin Wasserman before this, but I've always been intrigued by the sound of her stories. And after loving The Book of Blood and Shadow, I will be sure to pick up her other books!
The entire tone of the book was slightly unusual for me. There was something about Robin Wasserman's writing style and the story and the structure of the book which made it feel as a reader that time should be taken to think about everything that's happened, everything that's said. But at the same time, it was impossible for me to not fly through the pages and read more and more. I was absolutely hooked on this book, right from the first page. It's so exciting with all the secrets and double-crossing and the tension of being on the run and being not sure if you're travelling with a murderer or not! Plus, the love story was rather sweet.
This book really had me on the edge of my seat! I loved the different twists to it and the added layers to this story as we're taken farther and farther into this complicated mess of a situation. I absolutely loved each of the characters, I love that we travel to Prague of all places and I especially loved the addition of all the Latin translations.
So, Nora and her best guy friend, Chris are Latin scholars put on this special new project translating some really old and historically relevant manuscript which is meant to hold the secrets to uncovering a way to speak with God called the Lumen Dei. Though sometimes feeling a bit of a third wheel when it comes to Nora's two best friends, Chris and Adriane's romantic relationship, Nora begins falling for the other person on this special translation team, Max. I loved the slow and steady build-up to their relationship. Falling in love over letters written in Latin seems like a great way to go about things, if you ask me.
But it is not to last! For one day, Nora finds her best friend dead, Adriane catatonic and her boyfriend on the run, suspected of murder. Nora must piece together this mystery and put all the missing pieces together in order to learn who killed Chris, who is after the Lumen Dei and how much in danger is Nora?!
Seriously, this book is amazing. I especially loved Nora as a character. She's so normal and relateable, and because I connected with her so much, I found myself going through all of the emotions she did. From the stirrings of first love, to the horror and confusion of finding someone you care about dead. The need to put things right and find out the truth, no matter how deep and awful things become.
This book really is like no other YA book I've read before! I'm so excited for everyone else to read it and love it as much as I did. It's not being published until the 19th of January, but when it is be sure to look out for it!
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 16 February 2012Format: PaperbackI agree with the other reviewers that this book is very different from the average book from this genre. It requires you to think and be able to follow the plot line - to concentrate.
I loved it but lost interest at one point and skipped ahead then went back to read what I'd missed. You can't follow the plot if you skip.
Robin Wasserman has done a lot of research and the book is all the better for it. She's included twists and turns so that when you think you've got it, you find you haven't.
The characters are well rounded for the most part. I just felt I needed a little more to connect with Nora to be able to sympathize with her and feel with her. Probably the detail in the book didn't allow it to happen and of course its lengthy too.
It s well written and I'm looking forward to reading more of her work.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 18 October 2018Format: PaperbackThe Book of Blood and Shadow by Robin Wasserman wasn't the book I was expecting, but oh my god, was it incredible!
The daughter of a Latin professor, Nora is talked into translating Latin for college professor known as the Hoff by her best friend, Chris, who is one of the Hoff's archival assistants, for extra credit in her senior year. The Hoff is obsessed with the Voynich Manuscript, a book written in code seven hundred years ago that no-one has ever been able to figure out. The Hoff believes Edward Kelley, personal alchemist to the Emperor managed to solve the book, and so has Chris and Max - Chris' room mate, and later, Nora's boyfriend - into translating Kelley's letters, while giving Nora the letters of his step-daughter, Elizabeth Weston, written to her brother, which he thinks will hold no import, but nevertheless wants them translated, just in case. Annoyed that she has been given this menial task, either because she's a girl or because she's a high school student rather than in college, Nora translates Elizabeth's letters anyway, needing the extra credit. Nora soon becomes quite attached to Elizabeth, finding much about her she can relate to, and soon she's translating the letters more for herself than for the Hoff and extra credit. But Elizabeth's letters contain more than the Hoff bargained for. They contain information that lead to Chris' death, Adriane - Chris' girlfriend and Nora's other best friend - drugged and trapped inside her own head, and Max missing. Everyone believes Max to be the murderer, but Nora knows that just can't be true. It's to do with Elizabeth's letters, and following the clues written four hundred years ago, Nora discovers dangerous secrets that lead to a mystery that some will do anything to to know the answer to. But solving the mystery herself may be the only way she can prove Max's innocence, and save her own life.
So originally, with the title and the cover, and the hints in the description, I thought this story was going to be a witchy, paranormal, dangerous kind of mystery that was perfect for reading in October with the lead up to Halloween. What I got is something completely different, but unbelievable. This book is absolutely amazing! It's like a YA The Da Vinci Code - I haven't read the book, as I've heard it's not great, but I have seen the movie, and they're the same kind of puzzling mystery. The Book of Blood and Shadow is complex, intricate, and so, so clever! I was gripped from the very beginning, and have been reading every spare moment I've had. This book is unlike anything I've read before.
The summary I've written above barely scratches the surface. We know from the very beginning that Chris is dead, but as Nora tells us, that's not the beginning of the story, but the middle, and she goes back to tell us about their friendship, about working for the Hoff, and about Elizabeth's letters. The story is completely fictional, except for the fact that it's steeped in so much real history. Edward Kelley was a real alchemist. Elizabeth Weston was his step-daughter, who was affected by the man she thought of as her father's mysterious death in prisoner. Most of the characters she comes into contact with, as we read in her letters, were real people, with one who was inspired by another real historical person, and, I think, two who were fictional. There is so much about this story that is real, that it makes all the fictional elements that much more credible. But it's not just real historical people, it's also real historical locations. The mystery - that is so complicated and involved I can't really talk about much of the plot without spoiling it massively - takes Nora to Prague, and to real locations where real historical events took place. Real history is woven so seamlessly into this story, it's almost a retelling. Elizabeth Weston and her actual life play such a huge role in this book, and Wasserman has used artistic license to give reasons and motivations for aspects of Elizabeth's actions and experiences. It's just so bloody clever! Even the Voynich Manuscript is real!
I also love that what is at the heart of this book is faith. It involves religious fanatics, and Elizabeth's own faith, even the faith of those around Nora, and yet Nora herself is a Jewish atheist - one of her parents is a lapsed Jew, and her grandmother took her to Synagogue as a child, and she knows some Hebrew, but she herself, now, doesn't believe in God. But everything that happens is to do with other people's faith and their beliefs - though not religion specifically - and it was so interesting and fascinating watching Nora trying to work out and puzzle through something others believe in, that she, as an atheist, completely disregards - because come on! - yet has to follow the faith of others, mainly Elizabeth, put into things in order to figure things out. I think it was really interesting to have our protagonist of the main story being an atheist following Elizabeth who was a devout believer. I think it would have made a huge difference if Nora had some faith, it would definitely colour her thinking when she hears what she hears and when she discovers what she discovers. It's her lack of belief, and therefore her lack of interest - because, as she believes, this thing is ridiculous - that makes this story what it is. And you see in those around her, who do believe in God, how they think about the discoveries made. But it's the fanatics who believe and whose belief is dangerous, and why Nora must solve things before they do.
I would absolutely love to talk about the cast of characters, but it would be difficult to do so, as my thoughts and feelings about them changed over the course of the novel due to their actions in the certain situations and circumstances they find themselves in. My feelings changed, whether majorly or in degrees, about absolutely everyone Nora knew. There were two characters I had pegged early on; one, because I, personally, simply didn't like them, no matter what Nora was telling us, and it had nothing to do with the story or the plot, I just didn't like this character, and my dislike became distrust which evolved into suspicion very, very early one. And the other I knew from the first time I "laid eyes" on them - not that it was necessarily obvious early on, but was more instinctual. However, having guessed or worked out certain things about people early on, the story itself I never had any idea where it was going. No clue. Which was what made the story so captivating; I didn't know what was going to happen next, let alone in several chapters time, or as a conclusion. I never knew what to expect and it was completely unpredictable, and I absolutely loved it!
With hindsight and looking back over the whole story, I do think there are some people who may think The Book of Blood and Shadow is a bit slow, or perhaps too long. When I think about what happened in the last third of the book in comparison to the first two thirds, I do think people may potentially have an issue with the story over all once they have finished. But for me, the story is like a blooming flower, whose outer petals have to open before any of the others can, each taking it's turn - that's how the story unfolds. All of the story is needed, and the whole story is gripping; I was captivated from the very first page, but I became more and more captivated as the story progressed.
I absolutely loved The Book of Blood and Shadow, and that ending! I know I said I didn't know what to expect, but I really wasn't expecting that! And I have my own thoughts and theories about it all, that I sadly can't discuss. But this story is just incredible, and I most definitely want to read more like it. Mate, this book should be made into a movie! The Book of Blood and Shadow is an absolutely incredible read, and I can't recommend it enough!
Top reviews from other countries
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TRReviewed in Germany on 11 March 20122.0 out of 5 stars Aboslut kein Buch für mich...
Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseKurzbeschreibung
When the night began, Nora had two best friends and a boyfriend she adored. When it ended, she had nothing but blood on her hands. Chris was dead. Adriane couldn't speak. And Max, Nora's sweet, smart, soft-spoken Prince Charming, was gone. He was also-according to the police, according to her parents, according to everyone-a murderer.
Desperate to prove his innocence, Nora's determined to follow the trail of blood, no matter where it leads. But Chris's murder is just one piece in a puzzle that spans continents and centuries. Solving it may be the only way she can save her own life.
Buchgestaltung
Mir gefällt das Cover ganz gut, aber die Farben sind mir etwas zu 'fröhlich' und 'bunt' dafür, das im Buch etwas düstere Themen behandelt werden. Der Titel passt auch nicht so richtig. Im Buch geht es zwar auch um ein Buch aber größtenteils doch eher um alte Briefe und andere Dinge. Insgesamt hätte man also mehr aus der Gestaltung machen können.
Meinung
Vorweg möchte ich sagen, das 'The Book of Blood and Shadow' kein schlechtes Buch ist. Es gibt immer zwei Gründe für mich, einem Buch eine niedrigere Bewertung zu geben. 1) Das Buch war wirklich grauenhaft (einfallslos, klischeehaft, nervig, unlogisch etc.) oder 2) Das Buch hat meinen persönlichen Geschmack einfach überhaupt nicht getroffen'.in diesem Fall trifft Grund 2) auf das Buch zu.
Ich kann nicht anders, als 'The Book of Blood and Shadow' mit dem sehr bekannten Werk namens 'Der Davinci Code' vergleichen. Ständig habe ich beim Lesen diverse Parallelen gesehen und hatte den Gedanken im Kopf, dass die Autorin versucht hat dieses Buch zu kopieren und den Inhalt auf Jugendbuch umzustellen. Natürlich behandelt Robin Wassermans Buch nicht das exakt selbe Thema wie Dan Brown, aber die Richtung in die alles schlägt ist doch dieselbe. Rätsel, jede Menge religiöse Aspekte, eine Sekte, die etwas anbetet, geschichtliche Verstrickungen und und und'
Für diejenigen unter euch die keines der beiden Bücher kennen möchte ich einmal den Unterschied erklären. Dan Brown teilt dem Leser Stück für Stück Informationen mit, klärt Geheimnisse gut durchdacht auf und behält sich zwar etwas Gutes für den Schluss zurück, bietet dem Leser aber auch genug Spannung und Charakterentwicklung. Robin Wasserman bombardiert den Leser mit Informationen (da muss man sehr oft schon einmal Geschichtsdokumente über 13 (!!!) Seiten lang lesen), lässt den Leser zig verschiedenen Spuren nachgehen, die am Ende alle in einer Sackgasse enden und ihre Charaktere bleiben hier oberflächlicher als oberflächlicher.
So, damit wäre für mich schon einmal geklärt, das 'The Book of Blood and Shadow' kaum etwas von einem Thriller/Mystery ' Roman hat.
Allgemein fand ich es äußert schwer den roten Faden im Blick zu behalten. Die ganze Geschichte über verliert sich die Handlung in diversen Dialogen und unwichtigen Dingen, die keineswegs zur Haupthandlung beitragen. Der Beginn des Buches war unbestreitbar spannend. Nach dieser einen Nacht, aus der einer von Noras Freunden als tot erklärt wird, ihre beste Freundin keine Erinnerungen hat und ihr Freund verschwunden ist'da möchte man einfach wissen, was passiert ist! Doch bis es überhaupt zu diesem Zwischenfall kommt muss man an die 150 Seiten lesen. Bis dahin wird immer nur über die Briefe gesprochen, die später wichtig sein werden, zu diesem Zeitpunkt aber nur mit Alltagsgeschehen aus irgendeinem vergessenen Jahrhundert absolut gar nicht unterhalten.
Dazu kommt, das ich keinen der Charaktere mochte, da sie alle distanziert und oberflächlich beschrieben werden und man einfach keinen Bezug zu ihnen aufbauen kann. Bis auf Nora erfüllen auch ziemlich alle Klischees und daher bleiben ihre Handlungen immer sehr durchschaubar. Nora war mir persönlich etwas zu verbissen und zu besessen und zu mutig und'einfach zu heldenhaft. Es gab keine Szene, in der sich einmal Angst hatte. Sie denkt verdammt rational, als ob die Welt ihr nichts anhaben könne und sogar, als sie gefangen genommen wird scheint ihr das nicht nahe zu gehen, als wäre sie einfach nur ein kalter Mensche, ohne Gefühle.
Zwischenzeitlich kann das Buch aber trotzdem glänzen. Besonders die Abschnitte in denen die Freunde in andere Länder reisen und eine Entdeckung machen haben mir gefallen. Spannend wurde es leider an diesen Stellen immer noch nicht.
Ich habe mich größtenteils durch das Buch gequält, einfach nur in der Hoffnung auf mögliche Wendungen und ein tolles Ende. Wie ihr euch sicher schon denken könnt, hat mir dieses auch nicht gefallen, da die Geschichte ihr Muster durchgehend beibehält. Eine Abfolge von starken Dialogen (das Beste am Buch!), langweiligen, gedehnten Handlungen und einer immergleich bleibenden monotonen Atmosphäre.
Positiv zu erwähnen wäre vielleicht noch Robin Wassermans Idee hinter dem ganzen.Ich bin mir nicht sicher, wie viel Fiktion ist und wie viel der Wahrheit entspricht, aber tolle Ansätze waren auf alle Fälle dabei!
Fazit
Skinned fand ich wirklich klasse, aber Th Book of Blood and Shadow hat mir einfach nicht gefallen. Die Charaktere leblos, das Potenzial des Settings maßlos vergeudet und besonders der Plot, der sich oft in sich selbst verstrickt und zu oft langatmige geschichte Briefe enthält, deren Inhalt man auch mit zwei Sätzen hätte beschreiben können.
Christina (A Reader of Fictions)Reviewed in the United States on 22 May 20125.0 out of 5 stars Totally Unique and Complex YA
Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseWhoa! Talk about a hook! The Book of Blood and Shadow starts off with a bang. From the first sentence, I definitely knew something creepy was going on and that I needed to know more about it. Let me tell you right now: the hook was not a trap. Every bit of this book is so good.
Robin Wasserman has managed to write an original YA story, by which I mean one that's not remotely like the standard YA book. Nora, for example, is not your standard YA heroine. She's not absurdly clutzy, but she is incredibly intelligent, as in a genius at Latin. Nor is Nora particularly attractive; she's kind of average looking. Her hair is mousy brown, her nose too large for her face and she doesn't wear makeup almost ever. In short, she looks like a lot of girls, rather than some super shiny-haired YA cover girl. This makes her so much easier to relate to.
Then there's her storybook love. Well, he's not your usual guy fare either. The perfect-ish guy is her best friend, Chris, who's dating her other best friend. Her boyfriend is Max, who she thought was creepy for quite a while after first meeting at him. Apparently, he stares a lot, perhaps to a Maureen Johnson-esque degree. Max wears glasses and is totally socially awkward, very much not your usual YA hero.
Actually, this book has a lot more in common with novels like The Rule of Four. Both focus on academic research of an old text about which very little is known. Where Caldwell and Thomason's book is solely historical fiction though, Wasserman has added a paranormal element. In some books, paranormal is overdone and melodramatic. Here it creates the perfect creepy, gothic atmosphere. For most of the book, you don't even know what the paranormal is; you just sense its presence lurking just off screen, creating serious suspense.
As Nora's story progresses, so does her research into the letters of Elizabeth, which could possibly provide insight into The Book her group is researching for Hoff (crotchety professor in search of glory). Although the individual letters are fairly short, I found myself getting just as sucked into Elizabeth's tale as into Nora's. In some historical fiction with this setup, the 'historical documents' are the weak point. Wasserman deftly avoids that trap with the grace of the dancing hippo from Fantasia.
The book is dark, unrelenting, soul-breakingly, fabulously, perfectly dark. Everything in Nora's life has pretty much already fallen apart, leaving her bruised, even before the book has begun. Well, things are just getting started for poor Nora. Her world gets shaken on its foundations. Robin Wasserman definitely goes on the list of awesome YA authors not afraid to do terrible things to their heroines/heroes. I love this, because, well, have you met life?
In undergrad, I was a theology minor, despite having been an agnostic all of my life, leaning much closer to the atheist side of things than the religious. The reason for my study of theology is that, simply put, I find belief fascinating, both on a global and individual scale. Certainly, it's interesting as a historian to look at how the religions themselves developed from a single person or group to a massive organized thing. Even more so, though, I love hearing the stories of individuals, of how they came to subscribe to their particular faith (or lack thereof). The theology in this book is wonderful, and, if you have any interest in that, I highly recommend this. Again, I think Wasserman was very daring to write this, and I applaud her for it. My favorite quote was one that pretty much sums up my opinions on the idea of God.
The story of The Book of Blood and Shadow is also incredibly intricate. I have so much respect for Robin Wasserman for having pulled off a book of this scope. She did so much research, both into Prague's history, into ancient languages, and into secret codes. To sum up this review into just a few words: Robin Wasserman is BRILLIANT, and so is her book. It's out now, so what the heck are you waiting for? GO GET IT!
This was my first foray into Robin Wasserman's books, although I have checked out Skinned from the library at least three times and then not had time to read it, but it will by no means be my last. In fact, I'm pretty sure Skinned is getting bumped up the TBR list. There might be a review of it in August, as I'm planning dystopian awesome!
Tirzah PriceReviewed in the United States on 16 May 20124.0 out of 5 stars Dark secrets, crumbling documents and relics, and secret societies abound
Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseFor Nora, being a research assistant to an elderly professor at a local university isn't the most exciting work study experience in the world. Her skills with Latin are good for lots of boring translations, but at least she gets to work with her best friend Chris and boyfriend Max. But her work gets interesting when she begins translating a series of letters written by a woman named Elizabeth Weston, revealing the mystery of a device, the Lumen dei, which supposedly enables mankind to communicate directly with God. Nora doesn't believe in the device, but she empathizes with Elizabeth despite the centuries that separate them. Then one violent night changes everything--Chris is dead, his girlfriend Adrianne is practically catatonic, and Max is missing. Nora must put together the clues Elizabeth left behind to find Max, evade the men who have proven they will kill for her information, and finally figure out what happened the night her best friend died.
Rob Wasserman's latest novel is an engaging mix of history, romance, and mystery. Dark secrets, crumbling documents and relics, and shady secret societies abound in this meticulously written story. Nora's search for answers to her friend's death and the mystery brought up by Elizabeth's letters go almost hand in hand with her own issues questions regarding faith and religion in the aftermath of her brother's tragic death. These personal issues are what make her connect with Elizabeth and her experiences and help emotionally invest herself into the mystery of the Lumen Dei. The mystery is very complicated and convoluted--the chronology of Elizabeth's letters and clues can be a little hard to follow, especially when Nora travels to Prague to find answers. There is plenty of action and many plot twists that play out through the streets of the old city as Nora gets closer and closer to the truth, which will test her beliefs and values and make her re-evaluate her relationships. The conclusion is surprising and maybe a little abrupt; there doesn't seem to be a lot of falling action, and there are a few loose ends to puzzle through still. However, the way that Wasserman sets up The Book of Blood and Shadow is clever, and despite any lingering questions this extremely well-written and unique story will keep readers thinking long after the final page.
Cover Comments: I adore this cover! I love the shadows of the title font and the way the building is reflected in the girl's eyes, the angle of her face. It's just so cool! And I definitely recommend getting this one in print--the book is beautiful. I love the deckle edges and the end papers on this one.
Amazon CustomerReviewed in the United States on 19 April 20125.0 out of 5 stars Fantastic read
Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseAside from some minor issues I took with bits and pieces at the end of the plot [and when don't I?], I absolutely loved the book. Especially the writing. I noticed a few criticism of the pacing, but I stand solidly on the other side of that. For me, the pacing was wonderful. It wasn't so quick to rush into the action/plot that it left out the characters/story. Robin's presentation of the characters and their relationships was completely stunning, in that I was emotionally invested in no time at all. She made me care about the characters, want to spend more time with them in their happy little pre-disaster lives, before she blew everything to pieces. It was a wonderful ride.
B.P.Reviewed in the United States on 28 March 20132.0 out of 5 stars DA V Code It Is Not
I am an avid reader, reading over 1,000 books in 2 years. Although this is an interesting read, I was exhausted by the time it was finished. I read it all the way through in two days. The researching of old books and documents with religious cults and murder does keep you involved in wanting to solve this elaborate puzzle while finding the murder. It was not difficult for me to figure out the murder early on along with their manipulations to the other characters. I just found myself too distracted with too much information which did not matter. I for one like complications and mystery. However, this did not do it for me. I did not come away feeling, " Wow this is a great book." Overall, if you like this type of story and don't have great expectations, you will like it and maybe it will surprise you. It's obvious the writer is highly intelligent and her young high school and college students in the story rate far above the average student. Thank you dear author for once showing kids can be intelligent and not idiots looking for vampire love.