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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Vivian Vande Velde is an Edgar Award-winning author of fiction for young adults. Heir Apparent, a Junior Library Guild Selection and winner of the Anne Spencer Lindbergh Prize for Best Children's Fantasy Novel, has been called "consistently entertaining" by Publishers Weekly. This clever and imaginative fantasy, featuring a marvelous reading from narrator Carine Montbertrand, will lure curious listeners into the virtual reality world of a medieval-styled arcade game that might just be deadly.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 16, 2002
      Vande Velde (Never Trust a Dead Man) establishes a clever premise for this consistently entertaining fantasy novel. When Giannine arrives at the virtual reality arcade, the organization Citizens to Protect Our Children is protesting out front (their signs bear such messages as inappropriate for children and magic = satanism). Giannine goes in anyway, choosing to play Heir Apparent. In it, she assumes the role of shepherd Janine de St. Jehan, illegitimate daughter of the late king, and she will become the new king if she can survive constant threats, including potential warfare and perhaps even a dragon. For Giannine, the stakes are raised when a man claiming to be the arcade's CEO appears in her game, telling her that the CPOC protestors have vandalized the equipment: Her only way out of the game is to successfully complete it—and quickly, or she risks "fatal overload." The story line is ingeniously developed; each time Giannine's character "dies," Giannine must start back at the beginning, making more informed choices and using her developing diplomacy to prevent a war with barbarians, or win over the royal troops. It can be a little hard to keep track of all the people and the plotting, but hilarious characters (like a sweet-talking barbarian king and a centipede-eating wizard) plus fantastical elements (e.g., a hat that "lets you avoid the time stream keep moving when all about you is still") will spur readers on toward the satisfying conclusion. Ages 8-12.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Giannine's 14th birthday present is a gift certificate to a futuristic arcade. There she elects to play a medieval virtual reality game and becomes the illegitimate daughter of a king who names her heir to the throne. When the electrical currents at the arcade are disrupted, Giannine must finish the game successfully, or a system overload may fry her brain. However, dying in the game is not a problem--it just starts over from the beginning (again and again). After the third start, Carine Montbertrand's plodding delivery makes wanting to continue difficult. There's not much character delineation and little variety to the pacing. However, Giannine is a lively, sympathetic character plunked down in the middle of a rollicking good story. S.G. (c) AudioFile 2005, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 28, 2004
      When Giannine arrives at a virtual arcade, she is greeted by protestors but decides to play in Heir Apparent anyway. But then the arcade's CEO appears in her game and tells her the only way out is to successfully complete it—and quickly, or risk "fatal overload." PW
      called this a "consistently entertaining fantasy... ingeniously developed." Ages 10-up.

Formats

  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • Lexile® Measure:820
  • Text Difficulty:3-4

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