Deliver to Ukraine
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L**C
Four Stars
I liked more than the first one. This one had a more complex story line to it.
A**A
Such a great book.
I love this book. Came on time.Started reading it right away.I plan on getting it for my mom as well.
J**R
Delightful book
Delightful book. A great sequel in true Shannon Hale style. I thoroughly enjoyed it and so did my 12 yr old.
P**I
Great book.
Great book. Shared it with my family.
A**R
Five Stars
Superbook!
V**N
Simplistic..
Dumb..threw it away
E**S
I need you to believe, Miri, that things can change.
A princess has been selected, and all the other girls have gone back to their homes. The end? They lived happily ever after?Well... not exactly. "Princess Academy: Palace of Stone" picks up where Shannon Hale's first enchanting tale of potential princesshood left off, now with a darker French Revolution-inspired twist. The plot is a bit scattered at times, shifting from rising unrest to the romantic travails of Miri, but it's a powerful little fantasy story with a heroine that is impossible to not like.All the girls of Mount Eskel are summoned to the palace, so they can attend to Britta before her wedding next spring. But upon arriving, Miri realizes that things aren't going well for Britta's future in-laws -- all the other provinces send mocking tributes, and a person claiming to represent the "shoeless" tries to murder the king. A revolution is brewing because of the king's high taxes, among the poor and rich alike.And Miri quickly discovers that the people of Asland are not fond of the Mount Eskel people. Though she lives in luxury and attends a fine university, everyone sees her as a bumpkin who is lower than the servants.Before long she finds herself suspended between the royals and the rebels -- she loves and supports Britta, but she also realizes what the king's callous indifference has done to his country. But when the rebel leaflets start stirring up hatred of Britta -- using Miri's innocent words against her -- Miri realizes that both sides are acting with cruelty she can't support. But how can a humble girl from Mount Eskel stop a revolution?Writing a sequel to "Princess Academy" is a pretty gutsy move on Shannon Hale's part -- after all, it won the coveted Newbery Award. But she pulls it off nicely with "Princess Academy: Palace of Stone," primarily because it's not the same story all over again. And Miri finds out more about the world -- poverty, corruption, snobbery and cruelty among the nobles. I guess fantasy worlds aren't as different from reality as you think.In this case, she drew a lot of inspiration from the French Revolution... although thankfully there's a less bloody, happier resolution to the Aslandian conflict. After introducing the rebellion with a bang (literally), Hale winds the dark threads of impending war through Miri's story. As the story goes on, they grow thicker and coarser, until finally there is nothing else to be seen.The plot is sometimes a little scattered, bouncing between the court and the secret rebel meetings. It only meshes together neatly in the tautly-written climax, which resonates with Miri's voice and inner strength. And Hale's nimble, bright prose and little patches of singsong poetry keep it flowing smoothly as a bolt of silk. And she catches emotions that shine like so many jewels -- the moments of humiliation, of happiness, and occasionally of romance.Miri is still a lovely and instantly relatable heroine, and she expands in strength and intelligence in this book. As she learns more about life in Asland, she also finds out how nasty it can be -- and her compassion for the shoeless is not diminished by her love for Britta. "We could try to unite nobility and commoners to bring change together," she urges the rebels in one scene, and she works toward that goal for the rest of the book.She also gets stuck in a love triangle in this book. She and Peder have a slightly awkward romantic relationship, but the wealthy rebel boy Timon also develops a massive crush on her as well. Hale adds little flickers of development to the various people here -- Britta, Lady Sisela, the dull queen and the spoiled cold king -- to keep them from ever seeming flat or simple.While not quite as tight in places as "Princess Academy," the sequel "Palace of Stone" is a little gem of a fantasy book -- especially since it rests on a bright, strong young heroine. A delightful little book.
M**U
Where is Mount Eskel History?
Miri returns in this continuation of the “Princess Academy” series. Now she has to deal with something more sinister than bandits: court politics. It’s not so convoluted as the court of the Medicis but it’s just as fraught with peril. The book is entirely from Miri’s viewpoint so we see how she gets swept up in revolutionary zeal while striving to protect her friend Britta from the growing restlessness and anger of a starving people.Any reader of history knows that revolutions are often built on long trails of bloodshed. But Miri comes from a very small town where everyone knows everybody else. A thief isn’t punished; he or she is merely told sternly to return whatever was taken. So it takes Miri a long time to realize that her new traitorous friends aren’t interested in a bloodless coup or having a peaceable discussion with the royal heads of state. They want change and they don’t care who suffers for them to obtain it.What I’ve always liked about Miri is her thirst to learn, to grow beyond the confines of her little world. So it’s delightful for the reader to watch her soak up information about anything and everything and to apply her new and old knowledge to change the world and save her friends.As always, this series illustrates a small girl with a big heart and a sweeping intellect, a girl willing to stand up to a king and nudge a stoic boyfriend into getting what she wants. It will be fascinating to see how she writes Mount Eskel into the court’s history books.
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