<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>Includes author's Q&A and an excerpt from Breaking Stalin's nose.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p><b>A long undisturbed bedroom. A startling likeness. A mysterious friend.</b> </p><p>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? </p><p>From Eugene Yelchin, the author and illustrator of <i>Arcady's Goal</i> and the Newbery Award-winning <i>Breaking Stalin's Nose</i>, comes <i>The Haunting of Falcon House</i>, an illustrated middle grade story that'll both haunt readers and leave them knowing a little bit more about Russian history.</p><p>This title has Common Core connections.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p>"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 . . . and its exploration of the role of art as a vehicle for liberation. . . . <b>Eerie and effective.</b>" --<i>Kirkus Reviews</i>, <b>starred review, </b>on <i>The Haunting of Falcon House</i></p><p>"The novel's 56 mini-chapters are interspersed with beguiling ink sketches of everything from star-soaked skies and stark graves to pitchforks and dozing kittens. The narrative itself . . . is by turns wide-eyed, inquisitive, and earnest. <b>This is a haunting at its very best.</b>" --<i>Booklist</i>, <b>starred review</b>, on <i>The Haunting of Falcon House</i></p><p> "Yelchin (<i>Arcady's Goal</i>) sets his imaginative, layered mystery--prefaced by a tongue-in-cheek opening note on the story's purported origins--in late-19th-century Saint Petersburg. . . . Offbeat, smudged sketches play a peculiar yet effective counterpoint to the evocative language, and helpful historical notes are included." -<i>Publishers Weekly</i>, on <i>The Haunting of Falcon House</i></p><p>"Readers will enjoy the budding friendship, and the ghost story/mystery is compelling. . . . 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." --<i>School Library Journal</i>, on <i>The Haunting of Falcon House</i></p><p>"Two survivors of Stalinist oppression attempt to form a family in this companion to the 2012 Newbery Honor-winning <i>Breaking Stalin's Nose</i> . . . <b>An uplifting, believable ending makes this companion lighter - but no less affecting - than its laurelled predecessor.</b>" --<i>Kirkus Reviews on Arcady's Goal</i></p><p>"Mr. Yelchin has compressed into two days of events an entire epoch, giving young readers a glimpse of the precariousness of life in a capricious yet ever-watchful totalitarian state." --<i>The Wall Street Journal on </i><i>Breaking Stalin's Nose </i></p><p>"A miracle of brevity, this affecting novel zeroes in on two days and one boy to personalize Stalin's killing machine of the '30s. . . . Black-and-white drawings march across the pages to juxtapose hope and fear, truth and tyranny, small moments and historical forces, innocence and evil. <b>This Newbery Honor book offers timeless lessons about dictatorship, disillusionment and personal choice.</b>" --<i>San Francisco Chronicle on </i><i>Breaking Stalin's Nose </i></p><p>"This brief novel gets at the heart of a society that asks its citizens, even its children, to report on relatives and friends. <b>Appropriately menacing illustrations by first-time novelist Yelchin add a sinister tone.</b>" --<i>The Horn Book, </i><b>starred review</b><i>, on Breaking Stalin's Nose </i></p><br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><b>Eugene Yelchin </b>is the author and illustrator of <i>Arcady's Goal </i>and the Newbery Honor book <i>Breaking Stalin's Nose</i>. Born and educated in Russia, he left the former Soviet Union when he was twenty-seven years old. Mr. Yelchin has also illustrated several books for children, including <i>Crybaby</i>, <i>Who Ate All the Cookie Dough?</i> and <i>Won Ton</i>. He lives in California with his wife and children.
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