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The Turnaway Girls

Hardback

Main Details

Title The Turnaway Girls
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Hayley Chewins
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:272
Dimensions(mm): Height 216,Width 149
ISBN/Barcode 9780763697921
ClassificationsDewey:FIC
Audience
Children / Juvenile

Publishing Details

Publisher Candlewick Press,U.S.
Imprint Candlewick Press,U.S.
Publication Date 19 September 2018
Publication Country United States

Description

Delphernia Undersea wants to sing. But everyone on Blightsend knows music belongs to the Masters - and girls with singing throats are swallowed by the sea. On the strange, stormy island of Blightsend, twelve-year-old Delphernia Undersea has spent her whole life in the cloister of turnaway girls, hidden from sea and sky by a dome of stone and the laws of the island. Outside, the Masters play their music. Inside, the turnaway girls silently make that music into gold. Making shimmer, Mother Nine calls it. But Delphernia can't make shimmer. She would rather sing than stay silent. When a Master who doesn't act like a Master comes to the skydoor, it's a chance for Delphernia to leave the cloister. Outside the stone dome, the sea breathes like a wild beast, the sky watches with stars like eyes, and even the gardens have claws. Outside, secrets fall silent in halls without sound. And outside, Delphernia is caught - between the island's sinister Custodian and its mysterious Childer-Queen. Between a poem-speaking prince and a girl who feels like freedom. And in a debut that glimmers with hope and beauty, freedom - to sing, to change, to live - is precisely what's at stake.

Author Biography

Hayley Chewins grew up in Cape Town, South Africa, in a house full of books. A published poet, she studied classical voice before switching to a degree in English literature. The Turnaway Girls is her first novel. Hayley Chewins lives in Johannesburg, South Africa.

Reviews

Chewins' unhurried, first-person narration by a brown-skinned, curly-haired protagonist deftly reveals a tapestry of magic, power, and rebellion thread by ethereal thread. Questions of stratified gender roles, corruption, and what happens when a society stops asking questions fit with (and even enhance) Chewins' tale of music, magic, and self-discovery...Hope is ever the thing with feathers, and feathers abound here. -Kirkus Reviews (starred review) Writing in Delphernia's wry voice, Chewin, a poet, weaves an unusual, beautiful debut that sings with all the grace of the cloisterwings that Delphernia brings to life with her soaring voice. Entwining themes of rebellion, freedom, identity, and finding one's destiny are at the center of this lovely tale. -Publishers Weekly (starred review) Chewins' creative and imaginative debut is set in a cloister on the fantastical island of Blightsend, where Delphernia works as a turnaway girl, trained to make gold out of music that the island's Masters play...readers who reach the story's end will be rewarded by unveiled secrets and unifying connections between the narrative's events and characters. -Booklist Online "Lyrical, inventive, and utterly captivating, The Turnaway Girls is fresh yet familiar, a classic-feeling fairy tale that thrums with magic, music, and heart. The indomitable Delphernia will inspire young readers to trust in the power of their own unique voices, and debut author Hayley Chewins is a talent to watch." -Claire Legrand, author of Some Kind of Happiness "In a time when it feels nebulous and unwieldy to be yourself, especially when the world doesn't particularly understand or care about who that self is, this book was like a beacon in the darkness." - Lindsay Eagar, author of The Hour of the Bees "A startlingly ambitious and lyrical debut, set in a fantastical world where silence really is golden and speaking up can cost everything. Fiercely imaginative and beautifully wrought." -Kiran Millwood-Hargrave, author of The Island at the End of Everything "The Turnaway Girls is a gorgeous fable about the way societies cage girls' voices and the revolutionary things that happen when those voices break free. Stunning, timely, and necessary." -Anne Ursu, author of The Real Boy Chewins' poetic prose is the highlight of the novel. -Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books