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A Drop of Night
A Drop of Night
A Drop of Night
Ebook336 pages4 hours

A Drop of Night

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

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Modern-day teenagers meet a palace of terrors locked up since the French Revolution in this surprising and haunting thriller from Stefan Bachmann, the internationally bestselling author of The Peculiar and The Whatnot. A Drop of Night will thrill fans of Neal Shusterman and Jessica Khoury.

Seventeen-year-old Anouk has finally caught the break she’s been looking for—she’s been chosen to participate in an exclusive program that includes an all-expense-paid trip to France and a chance to explore the hidden underground Palais des Papillons, or Palace of Butterflies. Along with four other gifted teenagers, Anouk will be one of the first people to set foot in the palace in more than two hundred years. Bachmann’s masterful scene-building alternates between Anouk’s flight through the palace and the struggles of Aurelie, who escaped the French Revolution by fleeing into the Palais des Papillons in 1792.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherHarperCollins
Release dateMar 15, 2016
ISBN9780062289940
A Drop of Night
Author

Stefan Bachmann

Stefan Bachmann was born in Colorado and spent most of his childhood in Switzerland, where he graduated from Zurich University of the Arts with degrees in music composition and theory. He is the author of The Peculiar, his debut, which was published to international acclaim when he was nineteen years old. His other books include The Whatnot, A Drop of Night, and Cinders and Sparrows. He is the coauthor (with April Genevieve Tucholke) of The Secret Life of Hidden Places. He lives in Zurich, Switzerland, and Berlin, Germany. 

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Reviews for A Drop of Night

Rating: 3.3260869565217392 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

23 ratings4 reviews

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A DROP OF NIGHT was an engaging story whose primary narrator Anouk starts out unhappy, negative, cynical, anti-social, and generally unlikable but who grew on me as the story progressed and I learned more about the reasons for her behaviors. Anouk is a kid who has been chosen to take part in a archaeological expedition to explore a French palace built during the French Revolution deep below the ground with the purpose of protecting the aristocratic family. She had to go through all sorts of tests before being chosen and she is feeling excited and special. Four other teens were also chosen and they are all being whisked to France to explore. The kids come from a variety of locations and backgrounds and each has different talents. When they get to France they find out that much of what they were told isn't true. They learn that those who found them and offered them this opportunity have a hidden agenda. They also find out that the palace has many hidden dangers including rooms that are various kinds of traps. There is also someone else in the palace who is very dangerous. The kids are torn between two sets of enemies as they try to find their way out of the maze of the palace and get to freedom. They encounter a resident of the palace that they name Perdu who may or may not actually be trying to help them escape.Woven in with Anouk's story in the present day is the story of Aurelie who is the eldest daughter of the Duke who builds the castle and who tells her story of the time in 1789 when she and her sisters take up residence. Many mysterious things happen while she is in the palace and she is determined to find her sisters and escape. I don't know that I would classify this story as horror so much as a sort of spooky adventure in the science fiction genre. It was the sort of story that sweeps up a reader and immerses them in a vividly drawn fantasy world. I enjoyed it.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Recommended If You Like: books that are really far out there and take huge risks, something unlike anything you've read before, scary scenes, very creepy villains, flashbacks containing historical fiction with twists, strong female protagonistsThe Book:A group of teenagers have been flown to France, told they have been selected to be among the first to see and help unearth a massive underground palace.But their true purpose has yet to be revealed, and they find themselves caught up in terrifying circumstances seemingly beyond their control.What I Liked:This is a gripping read. I had trouble putting it down when it was time to get off the bus or go to sleep. Bachmann is really good at building tension and suspense.I loved that the strongest characters were female, both in the flashbacks and during the modern day scenes.Anything I Didn't Like?This book is really far out there in terms of the big reveal of what is truly going on. It's not what I had expected, and for me, it was too strange. But that is entirely a personal opinion, and, browsing on other blogs and review sites, this does seem to be a book that splits readers.So...?I really appreciate that Bachmann has gone for something really new and different here, and fully committed to it. For me, it was just too much, but others have loved it.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I've had a bit of a break in my 2016 reading and this was a great book to get back into the habit. It was fun.

    The narrative switches between Anouk, a 17 year old American girl in 2016 that's heavily channeling Xanthippe from Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, and Aurelie, a 17 year old French aristocrat running from revolutionaries in 1790. Chapters rarely exceeded 8 pages long and that made it easy to zip through chapter after chapter, switching stories fairly quickly. Both stories left me fascinated, flipping through quickly, eager to see the connections.

    In tone, A Drop of Night was reminiscent of the movie Cube (which, granted, came out before the characters in the book were even born) with an injection of fantastical horror.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Review courtesy of Dark Faerie TalesQuick & Dirty: Five teenagers on a trip to explore an underground palace, when everything begins to go crazy, will they make it out alive?Opening Sentence: “We are fleeing along the upper gallery when the windows explode.”The Review:Anouk feels like she has won a chance of a life time when she gets picked to go on an expedition to excavate the Palais du Papillon. She arrives at the airport to meet the other teenagers picked: Hayden, Will, Jules and Lilly. Anouk is initially aloof, because she has her own secrets to keep, and she doesn’t want the other teens to find them out. When they arrive in France and at the villa they are staying at, she begins to suspect something is off, and questions the leader of the expedition. When he hands out pills after dinner, Anouk is the only one who doesn’t want to take them and attempts to hide that from the adults.When she wakes underground, she gets the other kids up except for Hayden who won’t wake, and they take off into the palace underground. From there everything begins to go crazy, and as they run through the twisted traps and killing rooms, Anouk wonders if they will ever make it out alive? It becomes clear almost instantly that this palace is going to challenge them mentally and physically. While they try to avoid traps, something/someone is hunting them, and they are trying to figure out who all is locked down in this palace. Anouk knows that no one is looking for them and they will have to push themselves to their limits in order to survive.I am kind of wavering on whether I outright love this, or just really like it. I was sucked in and read the entire book in one sitting. I had to know what was going on. I was literally on the edge of my seat trying to figure things out and by the end I was totally blown away. A pure mixture of science fiction, fantasy, and horror. I really enjoyed how the characters evolved. Anouk was a total aloof brat at the beginning of the book, but those same qualities are kind of what helps the teens in the end. Because she is so jaded and mistrustful, she doesn’t willingly go along with taking the mystery pill, and that makes all the difference. She is also extremely gifted with languages and the other teens all seem to have special skills, and they quickly start bonding and figuring things out as a team.I said I was wavering on the love or strongly like of this book, but only because I just haven’t quite processed how I feel. On the hand this is a brilliant mind game type of a book, the answers are so out there and shocking that it feels like a roller coaster ride by the end. I think I am leaning towards love, but that’s because this book is right up my alley. I adore that combination of horror and fantasy with major twists and so much darkness. A Drop of Night delivers that and so much more, it is a page turning thriller and just when you think you have something figured out, you find that you are totally wrong.I saw the comparison of I Know What You Did Last Summer meets Frankenstein. I am not sure I agree with those comparisons. At least the I Know What You Sid Last Summer, that kind of implies the teens have done something bad and covered it up, and then try to survive a killer. Only one of those things really applies to this story, I will not disagree with the Frankenstein aspect, because I think that kind of suits this book. All in all, this book is great and it will definitely appeal to those who love horror and dark books.Notable Scene:“Jules is frowning, probably wondering what the odds are that everyone on this team is an asocial freak.”“It turns out having medical reasons to be mean and angry doesn’t actually help you become less mean and angry.”“An underground palace as large as the Sun King’s Court but buried 100 feet down was probably too ridiculous and excessive luxury to even consider.”“I don’t know what it is, but something feels wrong.”“I close my eyes and hope he didn’t notice me in the dimness.”“Perdu’s tied up at the end of the panic room like a psychotic freaking Smeagol.”FTC Advisory: Greenwillow/HarperTeen provided me with a copy of A Drop Of Night. No goody bags, sponsorships, “material connections,” or bribes were exchanged for my review.

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A Drop of Night - Stefan Bachmann

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