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Leaping at Shadows

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Madeleine's the newest arrival at the famed Dario Quincy Academy of Dance. She's worked hard to gain admission, and she's determined not to lose her scholarship. That means not asking too many questions when her antique necklace goes missing, and certainly not breaking curfew. So how does she find herself exploring the creepy tunnels that run underneath the school?

As if rivals at dance practice weren't bad enough, Madeleine begins to suspect that there's an ancient evil on the academy grounds. And when Madeleine and her rivals join together, sneaking out at night to explore the school's depths, the evil might just follow them back upstairs.

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    • The Horn Book

      January 1, 2014
      Five teenage girls investigate eerie occurrences at their prestigious-but-creepy ballet academy. Students' family heirlooms disappear and the friends discover teachers performing a ritual with them (Shadows). Kayley steals a pair of pointe shoes said to grant good luck--but as her dancing improves, her friends get inexplicably injured (Luck). Aimed at reluctant readers, these novels are entertaining if not especially original or characterful.

      (Copyright 2014 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • Booklist

      September 15, 2013
      Grades 7-10 Determined to succeed as a scholarship student at the country's most prestigious residential dance academy, Madeleine suppresses her feeling of foreboding upon entering the massive old building. She gradually makes some friends, and when her grandmother's necklace disappears along with jewelry with sentimental value to other students, the group swings into action. Though fearful of expulsion, the friends explore the sinister stone tunnels beneath the building late at night and fall prey to a cultish group of masked people who want the girls' blood. The encounters with the strange cult are less than convincing, and the portrayals of secondary characters are a bit thin. Still, the idea of horror lurking beneath a ballet school has its appeal. Older readers looking for short, accessible books are the target audience for the Dario Quincy Academy of Dance series. The first volume may end in rescue, but clearly something is very wrong, and further volumes are likely to explore the ongoing mystery.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2013, American Library Association.)

    • School Library Journal

      August 1, 2013

      Gr 6-10-Set in an elite residential ballet school, these stories focus on five students and their friendships, their classes, and the mysteries they encounter in the haunted old building. In the first book, teachers are caught holding cultlike rituals to ward off a curse on the school; in book two, one of the dancers, in a slump, steals a pair of antique pointe shoes from a display case in hopes of improving her luck, but she fears, instead, that she has put a curse on her friends. The plots are a bit far-fetched, but no more so than other popular mystery series such as those by R. L. Stine. The competent writing is suitable to the genre and will appeal to older reluctant readers. Characterization is strong enough to create interest in each of the main characters. The dance terms and ballet-centric subplots give the series special appeal to balletomanes, but they don't so overwhelm the story lines that they will restrict the audience.-Maralita L. Freeny, District of Columbia Public Library

      Copyright 2013 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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