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Jodi Picoult - Between the lines

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Between the lines: summary, description and annotation

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New York Times bestselling author Jodi Picoult and her teenage daughter present their first-ever novel for teens, filled with romance, adventure, and humor. What happens when happily ever after.isnt? Delilah is a bit of a loner who prefers spending her time in the school library with her head in a book one book in particular. Between the Lines may be a fairy tale, but it feels real. Prince Oliver is brave, adventurous, and loving. He really speaks to Delilah. And then one day Oliver actually speaks to her. Turns out, Oliver is more than a one-dimensional storybook prince. Hes a restless teen who feels trapped by his literary existence and hates that his entire life is predetermined. Hes sure theres more for him out there in the real world, and Delilah might just be his key to freedom. Delilah and Oliver work together to attempt to get Oliver out of his book, a challenging task that forces them to examine their perceptions of fate, the world, and their places in it. And as their attraction to each other grows along the way, a romance blossoms that is anything but a fairy tale. *** REAL FAIRY TALES are not for the fainthearted. Children get eaten by witches and chased by wolves; women fall into comas and are tortured by evil relatives. Somehow all that pain and suffering is worthwhile, though, when it leads to the ending: happily ever after. Suddenly it no longer matters if you got a B- on your midterm in French or youre the only girl in the school who doesnt have a date for the spring formal. Happily ever after trumps everything. But what if ever after could change? JODIPICOULT.COM WHAT HAPPENS WHEN HAPPILY EVER AFTER ISNT? Delilah hates school as much as she loves books. In fact, theres one book in particular she cant get enough of. If anyone knew how many times she has read and reread the sweet little fairy tale she found in the library, especially the popular kids, shed be sent to social Siberiaforever. To Delilah, though, this fairy tale is more than just words on the page. Sure, theres a handsome (well, okay, hot) prince, and a castle, and an evil villain, but it feels as if theres something deeper going on. And one day Delilah finds out there is. Turns out, this Prince Charming is real, and a certain fifteen-year-old loner has caught his eye. But theyre from two different worlds, and how can it ever possibly work? Together with her daughter, Samantha van Leer, #1 New York Times bestselling author Jodi Picoult has written a classic fairy tale with a uniquely modern twist. Readers will be swept away by this story of a girl who crosses the border between reality and fantasy in a perilous search for her own happy ending.

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Jodi Picoult Samantha van Leer Between the lines 2012 To Ema Who will - photo 1

Jodi Picoult, Samantha van Leer

Between the lines

2012

To Ema Who will always be the hero in my story Love Sammy To Tim - photo 2*

To Ema,

Who will always be

the hero in my story.

Love,

Sammy

To Tim,

Because sometimes

fairy tales do come true.

Love,

Jodi

A Note from Jodi Picoult

I was on a book tour in Los Angeles when my telephone rang. Mom, my daughter, Sammy, said. I think I have a pretty good idea for a book.

This was not extraordinary. Of my three children, Sammy has always been the one with an imagination that is unparalleled. When other kids were playing stuffed animals, Sammy would scatter her toys around the house and create elaborate scenarios-this teddy bear is wounded and stuck on top of Mt. Everest and needs a rescue dog to climb to the top and save him. In second grade, her teacher called me to ask if Id type up Sammys short story. Apparently, it was forty pages long. He sent it home with my daughter, and I fully expected a rambling stream of words-instead, I wound up reading a very cohesive story about a duck and a fish that meet on a pond and become best friends. The duck invites the fish to dinner and the fish says hed love to come. But then the fish has second thoughts: What if I am dinner?

That, ladies and gentlemen, is called CONFLICT, and its the one thing you cant teach. You are either born a storyteller or not, and my daughter-at age seven-seemed to have an intrinsic sense of how to craft literary tension. Sammys creativity continued to blossom as she grew up. Her nightmares are so vivid theyd give Stephen King a run for his money. As a teenager, she has written poetry that made me hunt down my own poetry journals from way back when-only to realize she is a much better writer than I ever was at that age.

So when Sammy told me she had an interesting idea for a YA book, I listened carefully.

And you know what? She was right.

What if the characters in a book had lives of their own after the cover was closed? What if the act of reading was just these characters performing a play, over and over but those characters still had dreams, hopes, wishes, and aspirations beyond the roles they acted out on a daily basis for the reader? And what if one of those characters desperately wanted get out of his book?

Better yet, what if one of his readers fell in love with him and decided to help?

Mom, Sammy said as I languished in Los Angeles traffic. What if we wrote the book together?

Okay, I told her, but that means were writing it. Not me.

What ensued were two years of weekends, school vacations, and evenings spent side by side at my computer, diligently crafting a story together. I think Sammy was surprised by how much hard work it is to sit and imagine for hours at a time; for my part, I learned that if you think its hard to get your daughter to clean her room, its even harder to get her to stay focused on finishing a chapter when its nice outside. We took turns typing, and literally spoke every sentence out loud. I would say one line, then Sammy would jump in with the next. The coolest moments were when we tripped over each others sentences and discovered we were thinking the same thing-it was sort of like we were having the same dream, so that in the act of writing, we were telepathic.

Sometimes when Im reading a great book, I think, Wow, I wish Id been the one to think up that story line. It has been an honor to have that same reaction when the story line was conceived by my own daughter. When Sammy first called me with her idea, I thought it was a great one. I hope, as you read Between the Lines, you think so too.

the beginning Once upon a time in a land far far away there lived a - photo 3***

the beginning

Once upon a time in a land far, far away there lived a brave king and a beautiful queen, who were so much in love that wherever they went, people stopped what they were doing just to watch them pass. Peasant wives who were fighting with their husbands suddenly forgot the reason for the argument; little boys who had been putting spiders in the braids of little girls tried to steal a kiss instead; artists wept because nothing they could create on canvas came close to approximating the purity of the love between King Maurice and Queen Maureen. On the day they learned that they were going to have a child, it is said that a rainbow brighter and grander than anything ever seen before arched across the kingdom, as if the sky itself was waving a banner of joy.

But not everyone was happy for the king and queen. In a cave at the far edge of the kingdom lived a man who had sworn off love. When you have been burned by fire once, you dont leap into the flames again. Once upon a time, Rapscullio had expected to be living his own fairy tale, with his own happy ending, with a girl who had looked past his scarred face and gnarled limbs and had shown kindness to him when the rest of the world didnt. In his mind, he replayed the day he had been shoved roughly into the mud by schoolmates-only to find the most slender white hand reaching out to help him up. How he had grabbed on to her, this angel, imagining her as his lifeline! Hed spent days composing poetry in her honor and painting portraits that never did her beauty justice, waiting for just the right moment to confess his love-only to find her in the arms of a man he could never be: someone tall, strong, and destined for greatness. Rapscullio had then grown darker and more twisted by his own hate every day. His portraits of his beloved had given way to intricate plans for revenge against the man who had single-handedly ruined his life: King Maurice.

One night, a roar rose from outside the gates of the kingdom, unlike any other sound heard before. The ground shook and a streak of fire shot through the sky, burning the thatched roofs of the village. King Maurice and Queen Maureen ran out of the castle to see a monstrous black beast with scaled wings the size of a ships sails, its eyes as red as embers. It stormed through the night sky, hissing sulfurous breath and spitting flames. Rapscullio had painted a dragon onto a magical canvas, and the demon had come to life. The king looked at the panicked faces of his subjects and turned to his wife, but she had fallen to her knees in pain. The baby, she whispered. Its coming.

Torn between love and duty, the king knew what he had to do. He kissed his beloved wife where she lay in bed with her maids attending her, and promised to be back in time to meet his son. Then, with a hundred knights armored in glinting silver, he raised his sword high and rode out across the castle drawbridge on a wave of bravery and passion.

But it is no easy feat to best a dragon. As he watched his loyal soldiers being torn from their mounts and flung to their deaths by the fiery beast, King Maurice knew that he had to take matters into his own hands. He grabbed the sword of a fallen knight in his left hand and, holding his own sword in his right, stepped forward to challenge the dragon.

As the night grew deeper, and the battle raged outside the castle walls, the queen struggled to bring her son into the world. As was the tradition for royal babies, the kingdoms fairies arrived bearing gifts just as the newborn was delivered. They hovered, incandescent, above the queen, who was out of her mind with pain and worry for her husband.

The first fairy sent a spray of light over the bed, so bright that the queen had to turn away. I give this child wisdom, the fairy said.

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