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The Haunting of Falcon House

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A long undisturbed bedroom. A startling likeness. A mysterious friend.
When twelve-year-old Prince Lev Lvov goes to live with his aunt at Falcon House, he takes his rightful place as heir to the Lvov family estate. Prince Lev dreams of becoming a hero of Russia like his great ancestors. But he'll discover that dark secrets haunt this house. Prince Lev is the only one who can set them free-will he be the hero his family needs?
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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 4, 2016
      Yelchin (Arcady's Goal) sets his imaginative, layered mysteryâprefaced by a tongue-in-cheek opening note on the story's purported originsâin late-19th-century Saint Petersburg. Twelve-year-old Prince Lev Lvov, who loves drawing and his mother in equal measure, has been called by his paternal aunt to take up his "noble duties" at the family's Falcon House. On his journey he has an unsettling experience: the face of an unknown boy replaces his image in the dark train window. At Falcon House, events unroll with an odd mix of creepiness and comedy: Aunt Olga and her servants are all broad characters who would be at home in a Dahl novel, while the mysterious boy comes and goes with disconcerting speed. As Lev begins to question the tradition of serfdom and his role as master of Falcon House, he also undergoes strange spells of uncontrollable sketching. Finally revealing Lev as an unreliable narrator, Yelchin leaves his fate open to speculation. Offbeat, smudged sketches play a peculiar yet effective counterpoint to the evocative language, and helpful historical notes are included. Ages 9â12. Agent: Steven Malk, Writers House.

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from May 1, 2016
      A "found" Russian manuscript recounts a late-19th-century haunting.Prince Lev Lvov is apprehensive about leaving his beloved mother when he is summoned to St. Petersburg to take up his aristocratic responsibilities in the impossibly cavernous Falcon House. Upon arriving, the dreamy, artistic 12-year-old meets his termagant aunt and an odd assemblage of servants, all of whom remark on Lev's resemblance to his dead grandfather--in whose creepy study his aunt insists he sleep. Lev is unsettled to discover his hand possessed when he sits down to draw to comfort himself. Those drawings, smudged and torn, provide eerie accompaniment to the text. The mysterious young Vanyousha offers Lev companionship but provokes more questions. Adding a further layer of weirdness, Yelchin positions the story in a "translator's note" as a document he found as a child. The story is both simple--a ghost story--and as complex as the country it rises from, offering glimpses of Russia's unique and brutal history in its examination of the institution of serfdom, just recently abolished in Lev's time, and its exploration of the role of art as a vehicle for liberation. Middle graders unfamiliar with that history will be intrigued by the ghost story and the compelling setting, and explanatory notes both provide context and help to prepare them for such books as Candace Fleming's The Family Romanov (2014) and M.T. Anderson's Symphony for the City of the Dead (2015) later on.Eerie and effective. (Historical fantasy. 9-13)

      COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • School Library Journal

      August 1, 2016

      Gr 5-8-When called to live in his family's ancestral home in St. Petersburg, Russia, 12-year-old Prince Lev is apprehensive. Becoming heir to a foreboding estate that he's never seen is daunting enough, and it is his first time leaving his mother. Add an aunt who can be harsh to say the least, the misrepresented memories of his glorified grandfather, and a night in a haunted study, and it's no surprise that Prince Lev is slightly anxious. But he soon develops a friendship with a mysterious boy who is hardly what he seems. Through a cast of thoroughly quirky characters (with often conflicting accounts), Lev learns the truth about his not-so-honorable grandfather, uncovering some unsettling family secrets and freeing the household from possession along the way. Yelchin introduces czarist Russia to young readers through the use of endnotes and footnotes, a novel albeit uncommon method for this readership. While enlightening, much of the historical content will be missed by children unfamiliar with this technique. Readers will enjoy the budding friendship, and the ghost story/mystery is compelling. Absolutely nothing is overlooked-from plot similarities in the author's introduction to the haunting illustrations, which appear to be drawn by the protagonist. Certainly a different sort of book, this is one that takes time to digest and fully appreciate. VERDICT A unique historical mystery from a celebrated children's writer and illustrator; a great option for classroom discussion and a jumping-off point for further exploration of Russian history.-Rebecca Gueorguiev, New York Public Library

      Copyright 2016 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from June 1, 2016
      Grades 3-6 *Starred Review* When young Prince Lev Lvov receives an invitation to the noble Falcon House, he knows he must leave his country home, his cat, Woolly, and his mother behind. It's not until after three days of train travel that Lev arrives at the dark and decrepit manor where strange things are afoot; Lev's aunt, Olga Lvovna, is ashen and stern, and a gaggle of jittery servantswhom she repeatedly refers to as villains lurch at her every word. What's more, Lev, the spitting image of his late grandfather, is expected to uphold that grandfather's hard-nosed legacy. Isolated in an ancient study, Lev is lonesome, homesick, and utterly fearful. Or so he is until he meets Vanyousha, a sheepishand mysteriousservant boy, and the two bond over their love of art, as well as their solitude. Inspired by a peculiar bundle of illustrations discovered by a young Yelchin (Newbery Honor Book Breaking Stalin's Nose, 2011), the novel's 56 minichapters are interspersed with beguiling ink sketches of everything from star-soaked skies and stark graves to pitchforks and dozing kittens. The narrative itselfaccompanied by useful footnotes for obscure phrases like lorgnette and Corps des Pagesis by turns wide-eyed, inquisitive, and earnest. This is a haunting tale at its very best.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2016, American Library Association.)

    • The Horn Book

      January 1, 2017
      In late-nineteenth-century imperial Russia, Prince Lev Lvov arrives at Falcon House to assume his noble duties. In his late grandfather's study, Lev is befuddled by episodes during which his hand seems to be taken over by a spirit, creating curious drawings. Short chapters, an eerie setting, and a surprising twist make this faux memoir a compelling read for historical-fiction and ghost-story fans alike.

      (Copyright 2017 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • The Horn Book

      September 1, 2016
      In the introduction to this faux memoir ( written by Prince Lev Lvov, with pictures drawn in his own hand and translated from Russian by Eugene Yelchin ), Yelchin describes finding the fictional prince's papers as a boy and later showing them to Laura Godwin (the real editor of this book) for publication. Set in late-nineteenth-century imperial Russia, the atmospheric story follows young Lev, the last of an ancient lineage, as he arrives at the cavernous Falcon House in Saint Petersburg, eager to assume his noble duties. There he encounters an assortment of peculiar people, including his irritable, wheelchair-using aunt, Princess Olga Lvovna Lvov; an ancient servant who insists he should be Lev's valet; and a playful young boy who may not be what he seems. In his late grandfather's gloomy study, which the servants are convinced is haunted, the artistic Lev is befuddled by episodes during which his hand seems to be taken over by a spirit, creating some of the curious drawings that are scattered throughout the book. Short chapters, an eerie setting, and a surprising twist at the end make this a compelling read for fans of historical fiction and ghost stories. monica edinger

      (Copyright 2016 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

Formats

  • Kindle Book
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Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:5.5
  • Lexile® Measure:790
  • Interest Level:4-8(MG)
  • Text Difficulty:3-4

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