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The Dark Flight Down

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
In the morning you should think
You might not last unto the night
In the evening you should think
You might not last unto the morn

Boy has survived the terrors of life with the magician Valerian, dark magic, and deadly chases, but he is still on the run. Now, as the City lies frozen, he is captured and incarcerated in the Emperor Frederick’s palace. Boy is transported to a world of splendor, and wealth beyond his wildest imagining. But beneath its golden veneer, this world is full of madness and cruelty, closely guarded secrets, and terrifying revelations.
In a mesmerizing conclusion to the enthralling story begun in The Book of Dead Days, Boy and Willow are plunged into the heart of it–the furies of the Emperor; the tricks of necromancers; a trail of blood that will lead to the grisly Phantom. Holding all their lives between its pages, The Book of Dead Days waits to deceive its next reader.
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  • Reviews

    • School Library Journal

      February 1, 2006
      Gr 6-9 -A teen who doesn -t know anything about his past, or even his own name, swirls deeper into mystery against the background of a Vienna-like decaying city. In this creepy but melodramatic sequel to "The Book of Dead Days" (Random, 2004), Boy is yanked from his previous life of serving the doomed magician Valerian and thrown into the deepest dungeon of the mad Emperor Frederick. The ruler is convinced that the boy possesses the secret of the Book, which foretells the future and might allow the aged Frederick to gain immortality. If Boy will not tell what he knows, he may be thrown to the mysterious Phantom, who dwells in the depths of the palace and drinks the blood of his victims. But Boy is determined to find the Book for himself, to learn his real name and who his parents were, and to be reunited with his sweetheart, Willow. "Dark Flight Down", which will perplex most readers who haven -t read "Dead Days", is more than a little theatrical; the characters speak in many shouts and exclamation points, and marvelous secrets are revealed in the denouement. But young teens who have read and enjoyed the previous book might embrace this open-ended conclusion." -Walter Minkel, New York Public Library"

      Copyright 2006 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • The Horn Book

      January 1, 2006
      Boy and his friend Willow ( "The Book of Dead Days" ) are still fugitives in a medieval city that resembles nightmare more than it does history. They're separated when Boy is captured by minions of the emperor, a vicious, foolish old man sequestered in a labyrinthine palace and obsessed with gaining his own immortality. As satisfyingly atmospheric as the first volume.

      (Copyright 2006 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • Booklist

      June 1, 2005
      Gr. 6-9. The sequel to " The Book of Dead Days" (2004) begins where the previous book left off: Boy's master, the magician Valerian, is dead, and the teenager is now in the hands of the scientist Kepler. Many questions remain unanswered. What does Kepler want with Boy? How will Boy's relationship with the orphan girl Willow evolve? And was Valerian really Boy's father? But newer, more dire concerns take hold once Boy becomes the prisoner of the eccentric Emperor Fredrick, who wants to live forever. As in the first book, Sedgwick's writing is gloriously textured, and the plot is intricate, even heart-stopping. But this doesn't stand on its own, and even readers familiar with the previous book will need to have read it recently. In fact, both volumes seem like one book that was uncoupled, with a back story added to the second half. Even so, fans will be enthralled by the twists Sedgwick provides, many of them literal, that lead to a dank dungeon. There is horror down there, but redemption as well. (Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2005, American Library Association.)

    • The Horn Book

      November 1, 2005
      Boy and his friend Willow, of The Book of Dead Days (rev. 11/04), are still fugitives in a medieval city that resembles nightmare more than it does history. They're separated when Boy is captured by minions of the emperor, a vicious, foolish old man sequestered in a labyrinthine palace and obsessed with gaining his own immortality. The emperor's sidekick, Maxim, believes Boy can lead him to the powerful Book, enabling Maxim to consolidate his own evil power; however, Boy's unreliable protector, the brilliant scientist Kepler, has concealed the dread volume. Secretly, Boy explores the palace, glimpsing terrifying passages leading downward to, among other horrors, the bloody Phantom, all the while seeking the elusive Kepler and Willow. It's a world of so little hope and trust, and so corrupt, that after Boy discovers his own royal origins, he and Willow simply turn their backs on "the huge, rambling, decrepit, awful, wonderful City" -- even though "their whole past lay in its maw" -- and head for a future elsewhere. As satisfyingly atmospheric as the first volume.

      (Copyright 2005 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

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Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:4.9
  • Interest Level:6-12(MG+)
  • Text Difficulty:7-12

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