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Illyria
Illyria
Author: Elizabeth Hand
Madeleine and Rogan are first cousins, best friends, twinned souls, each other’s first love. Even within their large, disorderly family—all descendants of a famous actress—their intensity and passion for theater sets them apart. It makes them a little dangerous. When they are cast in their school’s production of Twelfth N...  more »
ISBN-13: 9780670012121
ISBN-10: 0670012122
Publication Date: 5/13/2010
Pages: 144
Reading Level: Young Adult
Rating:
  • Currently 3.3/5 Stars.
 2

3.3 stars, based on 2 ratings
Publisher: Viking Juvenile
Book Type: Hardcover
Other Versions: Paperback
Members Wishing: 4
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

ophelia99 avatar reviewed Illyria on + 2527 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
I just read another Hand book earlier this month called Generation Loss. I was intrigued to read Hand's take at a young adult novel. This book is nothing like Generation Loss (which was an adult thriller, but the writing style does have many similarities). Like with all of her books Hand weaves a beautiful and dark atmosphere and creates magic that is subtle and mesmorizing.

Maddy and Rogan are cousins born on the same day. They see themselves as twins, soulmates, and maybe, eventually, lovers. They struggle against their families' teasing and with how they are teased by those around them. Then one day in a secret room in an attic they find a miniature magical stage. The stage makes them want to create and Maddy and Rogan try out for the school play. Maddy with her determination and Rogan with his magical presence and angelic voice will definitely turn the heads of their audience. But, their passion and beauty make those around them uncomfortable and perhaps this star-crossed couple was never meant to be.

I love Hand's writing style. She makes the surroundings come alive, doesn't spell everything out for you, and fills her story with dark atmospheric magic. In many ways this book is similar to her others in that it does those same things. This book is more about magical realism than straight up magic. The story and magic are a bit ambiguous, but more beautiful because they let the reader make what they will out of some of the scenes.

All of the characters presented are delightfully complicated. Maddy with her devotion to Rogan, the way she works so hard, yet excels only at being a little better than the norm. Rogan with his wildness and feyness; the way he cares so much but hides behind a veneer of casualness. Even Aunt Kate, who wants Maddy and Rogan to become something exceptional, has many layers of secrets and mysteries to her character. This is a love story of star-crossed couple, but as is always the case with Hand's book, it talks about so much more.

The cover is very apt, in that most of the book seems shrouded in a bit of mysterious fog. As I mentioned the story is a bit vauge at points. Given what a slender read this is though, Hand sure packed a lot of story in here. We are subject to Maddy and Rogan's past, the events of their teenage years, the school play, and then finally the results of their lives.

It was a beautiful and bittersweet story. I would recommend for an older young adult audience. It touches a lot on sexuality, incest (they are cousins after all), there is some swearing, and there is a lot of casual drug use.

Overall I loved this story. It is beautifully and intelligently written. The reader is whisked off to a place with a magical atmosphere with darkly magical characters. I found it to be very engaging and just...well...darkly beautiful.
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skywriter319 avatar reviewed Illyria on + 784 more book reviews
ILLYRIA was far from what I expected. I wanted something slim yet fulfilling, with a magic that is solidly grounded in reality. Instead, I felt no connection to the characters, and felt like the author was trying to go for mood instead of engagement, with the end result that neither was accomplished.

Content aside (because there have been other books written about incest), how is ILLYRIA a YA book? It reads like the work of an adult author who chose to write about teenaged characters without any real consideration for the emotions that teenagers may feel. Madeleine and Rogans togetherness lacked actual affection, both in the way Rogan treated Madeleine and the way Madeleine narrated their relationship with an old-woman-at-her-confessional manner. Characters spoke to one another with no real purpose behind their conversations exceptwell, in my opinion, except to fill up the pages, to give off a mysterious vibe at their ambiguous feelings and statements. And I hate hate hate when things in stories only appear for the purpose of accomplishing somethingin this case, the authors unrealized intention of creating an eerie yet compelling atmosphere throughout the novella.

ILLYRIA could have been an interesting, subtly magical, and deeply unsettling story. I think, however, that it was definitely marketed to the wrong audience, and thus I cant commend it as a work of YA literature.


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