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The false prince  Cover Image Book Book

The false prince / Jennifer A. Nielsen.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780545284134 (hbk.)
  • ISBN: 0545284139 (hbk.)
  • ISBN: 9780545433471
  • ISBN: 0545433479
  • Physical Description: 342 p. : map ; 22 cm.
  • Edition: 1st ed.
  • Publisher: New York : Scholastic Press, 2012.

Content descriptions

Summary, etc.:
In the country of Carthya, a devious nobleman engages four orphans in a brutal competition to be selected to impersonate the king's long-missing son in an effort to avoid a civil war.
Awards Note:
Nutmeg Award Nominee, Teen, 2015.
Subject: Impersonation > Juvenile fiction.
Princes > Juvenile fiction.
Orphans > Juvenile fiction.
Courts and courtiers > Juvenile fiction.
Secrecy > Juvenile fiction.
Impersonation > Fiction.
Princes > Fiction.
Orphans > Fiction.
Courts and courtiers > Fiction.
Secrets > Fiction.
Imposters and imposture > Fiction.
Princes > Fiction.
Orphans > Fiction.
Courts and courtiers > Fiction.
Secrecy > Fiction.

Available copies

  • 40 of 41 copies available at Bibliomation.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 41 total copies.
Sort by distance from:
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
Beardsley & Memorial Library - Winsted YA NIELSEN v.1 (Text) 33750000042212 Young Adult Fiction Available -
Booth & Dimock Library - Coventry YA NIE Asc.1 (Text) 33260000124728 Teen Fiction Available -
C.H. Booth Library - Newtown YA FIC NIELSEN (Text)
Series: Ascendance, 1
34014141707381 Young Adult Fiction Available -
Canterbury Public Library J NIELSEN ASCENDANCE #1 (Text) 33190000383992 Juvenile Fiction Available -
David M. Hunt Library - Falls Village yNIE (Text) 33180123714280 Young Adult Fiction Available -
Derby Public Library YA FAN NIE (Text) 34047130337745 Young Adult Fantasy Available -
Douglas Library of Hebron FIC NIE (Text) 33400130687323 Young Adult Fiction Available -
Dr. Helen Baldwin Middle School FIC NIE (Text) 30786000749786 Fantasy Available -
Dr. Helen Baldwin Middle School FIC NIE (Text) 30786000751642 Fantasy Available -
Edith Wheeler Memorial Library - Monroe TEEN FIC NIELSEN,J (Series) 1 (Text) 34026128328759 Teen Fiction Available -

Electronic resources


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Syndetic Solutions - Publishers Weekly Review for ISBN Number 9780545284134
The False Prince (the Ascendance Series, Book 1)
The False Prince (the Ascendance Series, Book 1)
by Nielsen, Jennifer A.
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Publishers Weekly Review

The False Prince (the Ascendance Series, Book 1)

Publishers Weekly


(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

This highly enjoyable medieval fantasy from Nielsen (the Underworld Chronicles), set in the medieval kingdom of Carthya, centers on 15-year-old Sage, an angry and pugnacious orphan, who is unexpectedly purchased by Conner, one of the king's regents. The entire royal family-king, queen, and heir-has recently died under mysterious circumstances, and to prevent civil war, Conner is collecting orphans who might believably be substituted for the dead king's younger son, who was reported lost at sea years earlier. Sage is soon engaged in a deadly, winner-take-all contest with two other boys to earn the right to impersonate Prince Jaron. Sage is deftly characterized through humorous first-person narration, quickly establishing himself as a beguiling antihero: "I'd never attempted roast thievery before, and I was already regretting it," he says when readers first meet him. "It happens to be very difficult to hold a chunk of raw meat while running." Secondary characters are equally fleshed-out. First in the Ascendancy Trilogy, this is an impressive, promising story with some expertly executed twists. Ages 8-14. Agent: Ammi-Joan Paquette, Erin Murphy Literary Agency. (Apr.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

Syndetic Solutions - New York Times Review for ISBN Number 9780545284134
The False Prince (the Ascendance Series, Book 1)
The False Prince (the Ascendance Series, Book 1)
by Nielsen, Jennifer A.
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New York Times Review

The False Prince (the Ascendance Series, Book 1)

New York Times


May 13, 2012

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company

THE business of children's books can seem, for reader and author alike, a bit like buying a ticket for the lottery: from many similar-seeming scraps of paper, one or two will hit the jackpot, while most will be tossed or remaindered. Baffling enough in the big book world, this disproportion, in which one book gets so much and the others so little, is particularly baffling when it comes to fantasy literature for younger readers. That a lottery seems unpredictable is, of course, what makes it a lottery - still, the difference between, say, the commercially mighty "Eragon" and all the other Tolkien followers seems so minute one doubts anyone could have predicted its peculiar appeal. However random the outcome, we at least know the tickets come stamped in two ways: "I'll take the jokey one, you take the spooky one," the 12-year-old reader said with a sigh, taking up her father's offer to split the work (and rewards) of reading and reviewing in turn two new fantasy adventures for children, "The False Prince," by Jennifer A. Nielsen, and "The Hero's Guide to Saving Your Kingdom," by Christopher Healy. Though the covers of both advertise tales about princes, the 12-year-old knows - a little eerily and in less than half a glance - which one is which kind, and what's more knows there will be only two kinds: that fantasy fiction for younger readers these days bends either toward the whimsical and inventive or the dark and fatalistic. This is true even of new classics. "Harry Potter," for all the blood and willed shadows of its last chapters, delights because of its jokes; it is Dobby and Gilderoy Lockhart and the Sorting Hat that make the reader hang on through the tediously ominous Voldemort hissings. Meanwhile, for all its mordant satirical side glances at what Mitt Romney's America might be like, "The Hunger Games" gives pleasure because of its spooks. The classic dystopian pursuit of the logical outcome of current circumstances (in this case, the bottomless cruelty of a society of competitive spectacle) is what makes it memorable. Tolkien, in an act of will, long ago brought together creatures of the two kingdoms - the lovable hobbits out of Grahame and Milne along with the darker William Morris-inspired dwarves and trolls - but the two realms have drifted apart ever since. Some of us write essentially whimsical, sentimental books; others, dark sagas. "The False Prince," by Jennifer A. Nielsen ("Elliot and the Goblin War"), to start with the father-reads-first one, is, as the 12-year-old spied, entirely an instance of the Spooky. A grim story that takes an occasional, though only very occasional, mordant turn, it tells how four orphaned boys are captured and kept hostage in the austere medieval kingdom called Carthya, whose topography and neighboring kingdoms are shown in an utterly typical fantasy map on the frontispiece. Snatched from their not very pleasant institution, the boys, we soon learn, are exploited by their new owner, the aristocratic Conner, as pawns in a plot to replace the pirate-slain Prince Jaron of Carthya with a plausible impostor. Put through brutal training in the arts of princedom, they sense that while whoever learns best will become the new prince, the others are almost certain to be assassinated. The central drama lies in the contest of wills between Sage, the most defiant of the orphans, and the cruel but (we are led to believe) essentially virtuous Conner, who may be brutal but is trying to keep the kingdom from civil war, fomented by Lord Santhias Veldergreth. (And if you do not suss out at the first mention that Veldergreth is a bad 'un, you have not read spooky pseudo-medieval fantasies.) The other would-be princes are there, it seems to sustain a modicum of suspense, while an apparently mute serving girl named Imogen dashes in and out of the narrative, to serve and warn the hero, in the manner of ambivalent servant girls since Karamaneh in Sax Rohmer's "Fu Manchu" books. (But, as the 12-year-old pointed out, since the book is narrated by Sage we know that whatever happens will not end with his murder, tamping down a possibility of jeopardy.) Written in the short, succinct paragraphs and cliffhanger chapter endings recommended by professional children's book writers, "The False Prince" has a surprisingly vague sense of place and particulars. "Conner's office was lined with shelves full of books and the occasional bust or trinket. Near the back of the room, he had a massive desk faced the door, and two comfortable chairs faced the desk. It made me wonder if he had a business through which he earned his own money." And an extremely cool plot twist near the climax is related in a similarly pedestrian manner: key, missing information suddenly offered in thirdperson, "here's what you didn't know" narration, while the fantasy world throughout seems to lie flat on a map with Scrabble names, rather than being realized in full. THE book's virtues are that it has a story, and a hero with a persuasively surly and defiant character, and a realistic vein of violence. There's more cruelty than one used to expect in this kind of tale, lending the story credibility. Sage is flogged in a dungeon till he bleeds, and several uneasy sections describe the dressing of his wounds. Meanwhile, an early loser in the "whowants-to-be-prince" contest is brutally murdered by the organizers. A post-"Hunger Games" inflation of effects has set in; it was once enough to have the villain beat a child to make him a villain,ƂĀ· now we need blood, wounds and a mounting body count. "The False Prince" is a page turner, certainly, but not what we might call a page earner - a book that makes the effort of reading worth the getting to the end. The absence of a fully furnished world keeps this particular page turner from lingering very long after the book is closed. Christopher Healy's first novel, "The Hero's Guide to Saving Your Kingdom," on the other hand, is the jokey one, of a heavily facetious sort. Using a tone that for this reader instantly recalled the wonderful "Fractured Fairy Tales" on the old "Rocky and Bullwinkle" program, with a dose of sour realism used to lift the clichƃĀ©s, "The Hero's Guide" features a kind of humor that may feel charmingly dated, resting as it does mostly on anachronism - contemporary speech placed in an archaic, fairy tale setting. This is comedy of a kind that perhaps ripened best in William Goldman's 1973 book "The Princess Bride." (With more patience for his dated pop-culture allusions than the father usually receives, the 12-year-old points out that this vein of meta-humor, in which familiar fairy tale types are revealed to be their opposites - brave trolls, evil princes - can also be found in the ever popular "Shrek" movies.) However hip" or outdated, the premise is indeed charming. Various Prince Charmings - or rather, Princes Charming, as the most pedantic of them points out - famous in fairy tales for rescuing princesses and celebrated by their court bards (who are more interested in selling a good story than in telling the truth), band together on a common quest. A witch, turned evil more by misunderstanding than intention, has kidnapped the bards, without whom the minstrels will have no songs, thus ending the reputations, and so the reign, of the four princes. The four hapless Charmings go out in search of Cinderella, whom the witch has also captured - a quest that recalls at moments the Musketeers and at others, the Marxes. (In homage, one of the princes names a squirrel Captain Spaulding.) Some of the jokes are very good indeed. We learn of Sylvarian dwarfs who "once started a war with the Avondellian elves simply because the elves were bragging about the fact that they got to pluralize with a "V" (Though the joke would be funnier without "the fact that") Not long after, one of the princes complains about the publicity that princesses get: "How does that manage to happen anyway? I vanquish the villain. I save everybody, and somehow it becomes her story." "'We all get the same treatment,1 Frederic says. 'What can I say, the people love princesses. Something about the fancy dresses, I think.'" Over several hundred pages, however, the relentless facetiousness, unleavened by suspense, seriousness or even sentiment, becomes exhausting. All that can happen, it seems, is another anachronistic joke. The "Fractured Fairy Tales" were short; this book is long. Each page offers something to laugh at, but it can be an effort to turn each page. These two fantasy novels, jokey and spooky, read together, do provoke a deeper, family-wide meditation on What Works (and its sordid companion category, What Pays). If "The False Prince" with its short paragraphs and clear climaxes works as it is read, it also makes one realize that good fantasies, like good novels, obtain their longevity through what lies beyond the story. (Recall how lurid and coarse Peter Jackson's "Lord of the Rings" films felt with Tolkien's sense of lore and history replaced by ghastly orc makeup and C.G.I, wolves.) It's not simply that a book with jokes should have spooks as well, nor that the spooks and jokes should necessarily be mixed together. It's more that the reader shouldn't be sure, upon entering the precincts of fantasyland, where the stress will fall - and whether the next page will bring laughter or fear. What makes adult books last is, as with wine, their mix of fruit and acidity, sweetness and tannins; what makes children's books endure is their sheer density, as with milkshakes. The marriage not only of jokes and non-jokes, but of a fecundity of episodes, of strange storytelling and unexpected lyric corners, supplies for younger readers the satisfying fullness of imagination. What we remember in the classics is their side chapels as much as their altars. Chroma's color orchestra in "The Phantom Tollbooth," the discussions of world government in "Mistress Masham's Repose", Mary Poppins's shopping trips - digressions are the diamonds in the mines of storytelling. More recently, Lemony Snicket's "Series of Unfortunate Events" found its poise between lightness of tone and intensity of feeling - walking the tightrope between charm and harm, but also providing a supersaturation of material. Jokey and spooky did not so much alternate as adjoin at odd angles. PUT simply, we like stories; we need worlds. We make the distinction idiomatically and instantly: we speak differently of good stories and great books, and the difference is in the breadth of the imagined worlds. Works of morality without comedy to make them real are as unsatisfying as comedy without morality to make it matter. Though the laws of serendipity still rule a book's reception, perhaps the only way for authors to approach the literary lottery is to buy as many tickets from as many different vendors as possible: one from the grim store where Melpomene, the spooky muse, sits; another from the Times Square newsstand of Thalia, muse of laughter. After that, it's all the luck of the game. Adam Gopnik is a staff writer at The New Yorker. His books include "The Steps Across the Water" and, most recently, "The Table Comes First."

Syndetic Solutions - Kirkus Review for ISBN Number 9780545284134
The False Prince (the Ascendance Series, Book 1)
The False Prince (the Ascendance Series, Book 1)
by Nielsen, Jennifer A.
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Kirkus Review

The False Prince (the Ascendance Series, Book 1)

Kirkus Reviews


Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

(Adventure. 8-14)]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Syndetic Solutions - The Horn Book Review for ISBN Number 9780545284134
The False Prince (the Ascendance Series, Book 1)
The False Prince (the Ascendance Series, Book 1)
by Nielsen, Jennifer A.
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The Horn Book Review

The False Prince (the Ascendance Series, Book 1)

The Horn Book


(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

The royal family has been poisoned, and now the kingdom of Carthya, surrounded by enemy nations, is poised on the brink of civil war. Among the various regents jockeying for the throne, Conner has the most ingeniously devious plan: to recruit four orphans, train them briefly and intensely in all things royal, and then choose one (while disposing of the others) to impersonate the long-lost, but presumed dead, younger prince. But Sage, the narrator of this tale, is not so easy for Conner to bend to his will. He is stubborn, rebellious, impetuous, and unpredictable. And yet as the story wends its way through the requisite twists and turns of the plot, he becomes the obvious and inevitable choice. However, Sage, too, has some tricks up his sleeve, and as the time draws near for the coronation of a new king, he reluctantly embraces both his past and future identities to forge a new destiny for himself and his kingdom. Sage is crafty and deceptive, recalling a young Gen from The Thief (rev. 11/96), and if the competition to become the new prince is fierce, it is not excessively violent. This book should appeal to fans of Megan Whalen Turner and Suzanne Collins as well as to readers not quite ready for those authors yet; its brisk pacing underscores the sure-fire mix of adventure, mystery, and suspense. jonathan hunt (c) Copyright 2012. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Syndetic Solutions - BookList Review for ISBN Number 9780545284134
The False Prince (the Ascendance Series, Book 1)
The False Prince (the Ascendance Series, Book 1)
by Nielsen, Jennifer A.
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BookList Review

The False Prince (the Ascendance Series, Book 1)

Booklist


From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.

This first book in a planned trilogy is action-oriented fantasy, but don't expect magical creatures. Instead, it revolves around political intrigue (a la Megan Whalen Turner's The Thief, 1996). Sage is a street-savvy orphan, and along with two other boys he is recruited by Conner, a nobleman who wants to remake them in the image of their country's lost prince, a victim of pirates and presumed dead. The task is urgent, as the rest of the royal family has been murdered and civil war seems imminent. As the boys, chosen for their passing resemblance to Prince Jaron, compete to assume a new identity and the throne, Sage discovers some unpleasant truths about their host, beyond his treasonous plans to pass one of them off as royalty. Sage is a likable hero full of smart-alecky snarkiness. Especially appealing are the friendships he forges: one with his bodyguard and teacher; another with a mute serving girl. Though lacking in subtlety, Nielsen's plot twists keep coming, and readers will want to see how they play out as Sage's adventures continue.--Cruze, Karen Copyright 2010 Booklist

Syndetic Solutions - School Library Journal Review for ISBN Number 9780545284134
The False Prince (the Ascendance Series, Book 1)
The False Prince (the Ascendance Series, Book 1)
by Nielsen, Jennifer A.
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School Library Journal Review

The False Prince (the Ascendance Series, Book 1)

School Library Journal


(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Gr 5-8-No one knows that the king, queen, and heir to the throne of Carthya are dead. Conner, a king's regent, chooses three orphans to vie for the role of Prince Jaron, the remaining heir, presumed dead, but whose body has never been found. In two weeks, Conner plans to reveal that he has found the missing prince. The boys are thrown into a brutal rivalry, knowing that if they are not chosen, death will soon follow. No one's true intentions are clear, especially those of wily Sage. One of the orphans, he subverts authority at every opportunity, yet never gives up his quest to become the pretender to the throne. On the day of the announcement, a truth is revealed that changes everything for Conner, the orphans, and especially Sage. Fast-paced and exciting, this book will appeal to readers who enjoy intrigue mixed in with their adventure. Although the twist at the end is predictable, the events that precede it are not. The characters' motivations may not always be clear but they remain consistent. Full of machinations and surprises, this book will keep students reading until the last page and eager for the second in the trilogy.-Kefira Phillipe, Nichols Middle School, Evanston, IL (c) Copyright 2012. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.


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