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Formats
Hardcover Details
  • 10/2024
  • 979-8-9909703-0-4
  • 294 pages
  • $28.99
Daniel Nichols
Author
Cassie and the Spectral Shade
Art is magic. Cassie has a whole new lease on life after being accepted into the prestigious Governor’s School for the Arts at Walnut Grove on full scholarship. At 16 years old, Cassie is just a bit older than her first year peers, and so finds herself stuck between newer students from prestigious families and the older students at the school. Striking up initial friendships with a small group of outcasts like herself, Cassie soon discovers that there is much more going on at the school and much more behind her scholarship than she had at first imagined. Discovering that her vivid imagination is in fact a portal to a whole new world, Cassie begins to piece together years of clues she has captured in her sketchbook while navigating the complex relationships that have long been weaving webs around her. Cassie and the Spectral Shade investigates the theme of Acceptance and Belonging.
Plot/Idea: 9 out of 10
Originality: 7 out of 10
Prose: 8 out of 10
Character/Execution: 8 out of 10
Overall: 8.00 out of 10

Assessment:

Plot/Idea: Cassie and the Spectral Shade is an endearing and mysterious YA novel that blends coming-of-age themes with a sprinkling of the otherworldly.

Prose: Although the tone skews somewhat younger than the protagonist's age–and there's a decidedly old-fashioned quality to the narrative–the fluid and descriptive writing is sure to captivate readers who enjoy dipping into the classics.

Originality: While the setting of a boarding school will draw inevitable parallels, Nichols brings a certain timeless flavor to the storytelling, while offering an enigmatic celebration of the power of creativity. The integrated illustrations further enhance the storytelling. 

Character/Execution: Cassie is a lovable character who at once feels out of place, while being comfortably at home within the world of her art. Fellow students and instructors populating the Governor's School for the Arts may sometimes blend together in readers' minds, but the magical elements of the story will keep fans of the lightly spooky engrossed.

Date Submitted: July 01, 2024

Reviews
Nichols kicks off the Chronicles of Eridul series with this spirited adventure following 16-year-old Cassie Cole in her first semester at the Governor’s School for the Arts at Walnut Grove, or “Walgrove,” as its students affectionately call it. Cassie, a scholarship student devoted to painting, drawing, and sculpting … all wonderful things that no one seemed to appreciate anymore,” bristles against Walgrove’s traditions and old-fashioned, upper-class student body. Meanwhile, students across disciplines start disappearing, the cases linked only by music from the semester’s theater production and a mural that suspiciously resembles the cold, fantastical world that Cassie travels to in her dreams—a world where the drawings she creates manifest as if real. It soon becomes obvious that this other world isn’t just real but dangerous, with mysterious beings lurking and even crossing over to the other side.

At Walgrove, “art is literally magic… for those who know how to wield it,” a twist on the boarding-school fantasy formula, though fans of the subgenre’s classics, including Harry Potter, will find Walgrove in many ways familiar. The unique student vocabulary (such as the pejorative “Judy” for scholarship students), the House system sorting by discipline, and “Jalaw,” the school’s specialty sport, all take cues from Hogwarts, with a 21st century update. The freshest innovation: the student’s artistic talents literally make magic, from casting charms with makeup to opening otherworldly portals by singing, and the professors aim to take advantage.

Cassie is a strong underdog protagonist, and her struggles to find acceptance at a strange new school are relatable. Her new friends form a cast of likable oddballs whose quirk and chatter proves inviting and amusing, and Nichols understands that the secret spice elevating the best magic-school and portal-fantasy adventures is rich, sometimes unexpected friendships. The narrator’s focus often jumps between Cassie and multiple other cast members, which at times can be disorienting. The theme of “art as magic” builds considerable intrigue, especially in the early chapters, and readers will likely hope for more in later volumes.

Takeaway: Lively art-themed magic-school fantasy about finding one’s place and talents.

Comparable Titles: Naomi Novik’s A Deadly Education, DIane Duane’s Young Wizards series.

Production grades
Cover: A
Design and typography: B
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A-
Marketing copy: A-

Formats
Hardcover Details
  • 10/2024
  • 979-8-9909703-0-4
  • 294 pages
  • $28.99
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