Syndetics cover image
Image from Syndetics

The silver kiss : with two short stories, The summer of love and The Christmas cat / Annette Curtis Klause.

By: Klause, Annette Curtis.
Material type: TextTextPublisher: New York : Delacorte Press, 2009Edition: 1st trade pbk. ed.Description: 198 p. ; 21 cm.ISBN: 9780385734226; 0385734220; 9780375857829; 0375857826 :; 9780385904353; 0385904355.Subject(s): Vampires -- Juvenile iction | Death -- Juvenile fictionGenre/Form: Young adult fiction
Contents:
The summer of love -- The silver kiss -- The Christmas cat.
Summary: In The silver kiss, a mysterious teenage boy harboring a dark secret helps Zoë come to terms with her mother's terminal illness, and in the accompanying short stories, more is revealed of Simon's past and Zoë's future.
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
Fiction notes: Click to open in new window
Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Shelving location Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Book Book South County Fiction Young Adult Y Kla (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 05000004215419
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

Zoe is wary when, in the dead of night, the beautiful yet frightening Simon comes to her house.nbsp;nbsp;Simon seems to understand the pain of loneliness and death and Zoe's brooding thoughts of her dying mother.



Simon is one of the undead, a vampire, seeking revenge for the gruesome death of his mother three hundred years before.nbsp;nbsp;Does Simon dare ask Zoe to help free him from this lifeless chase and its insufferable loneliness?

"Special seductive ed."

In The silver kiss, a mysterious teenage boy harboring a dark secret helps Zoë come to terms with her mother's terminal illness, and in the accompanying short stories, more is revealed of Simon's past and Zoë's future.

The summer of love -- The silver kiss -- The Christmas cat.

Excerpt provided by Syndetics

The house was empty. Zoe knew as soon as she walked through the front door. Only a clock ticking in the kitchen challenged the silence. Fear uncurled within her. Mommy, she though like a child. Is it the hospital again- or worse? She dropped her schoolbag in the hall, forgetting the open door, and walked slowly into the kitchen, afriad of what message might await her. There was a note on the refridgerator: Gone to the hospital. Don't worry. Make your dinner. Be back when I can. Love, Dad. P.S. Don't wait up. She crumpled the note and flung it at the trash can. It missed. She snorted in disgust. It seemed that lately all her conversations with her father had ben carried on with a banana refridgerator magnet as intermediary. The banana speaks, she thought. It defended the refridgerator, stopped her from opening the door. She couldn't eat. Zoe the Bird they called her at school. She had always been thin, but now her bones seemed hollow. Her wrists and joints were bruised with shadows. She was almost as thin as her mother, wasting away with cancer in the hospital. A sympathy death perhaps, she wondering half seriously. She had always been compared to her mother. She had the same gray eyes, long black hair with a slight curl, and deceptively pale skin that tanned quickly at the slightest encouragement. Wouldn't it be ironic if she died, too, fading out suddenly when her look-alike went? Zoe drifted from the kitchen, not sure what to do. How could she wash dishes or wipe counters when God knows what was happening with her mother at the hospital? She shrugged off her coat, leaving it on a chair. Dad kept on saying everything would be all right, but what if something happened and she wasn't even there, all because he couldn't admit to her that Mom might be dying? She tugged at her sweater, twisted a lock of hair; her hands couldn't keep still. I should be used to this by now, she thought. It had been going on for over a year: the long stays in the hospital, short stays home, weeks of hope, then sudden relapses, and the cures that made her mother sicker than the pain. But it would be a sin to be used to something like that, she thought. Unnatural. You can't let yourself get used to it, because that's like giving in. She paused in the dining room. It was sparsely furnished with a long antique trestle table and chairs that almost all matched, but the walls were a fanfare to her mother's life. They gave a home to the large, bright, splashy oils that Anne Sutcliff painted; pictures charged with bold emotions, full of laughing people who leapt and swirled and sang. Like Mom, Zoe thought-like Mom used to. And that's where they differed, for Zoe wrote quiet poetry suffused with twilight and questions. It's not even good poetry, she thought. I don't have talent, it's her. I should be the one ill; she has so much to offer, so much life. "You're a dark one," her mother said sometimes with amused wonder. "You're a mystery." I want to be like them, she thought almost pleadingly as she stroked the crimson paint to feel the brush strokes, hoping maybe to absorb its warmth. The living room was cool and shadowed. The glints of sunlight on the roof she could see through the window resembled light playing on the surface of water, and the room's aqua colors hinted at undersea worlds. Perhaps she'd find peace here. She sank into the couch. Just enjoy the room, she told herself; the room that has always been here, and always will; the room that hasn't changed. I am five, she pretended. Mom is in the kitchen making an early dinner. They are going out tonight to a party, and Sarah is coming over to baby-sit. I'l go and play with my dollhouse soon. But it wouldn't last, she she opened her eyes and stretched. Her fingers touched the sleek cheapness of newsprint. The morning paper was still spread on the couch. She glanced at it with little interest, but the headline glared: Mother of Two Found Dead. Her stomach lurched. Everone's mother found dead, she thought bitterly. Why not everyone's? But she couldn't help reading the next few lines. Throat slashed, the article said, drained dry of blood. "That's absurd," she said aloud. Her fingers tightened in disgust, crumpling the page. "What is this-the National Enquirer ?" She tossed the paper away, wrenched herself to her feet, and headed for her room. But the phone rang before she reached the stairs. She flinched but darted for the hall extension and picked it up. It was a familiar voice, but not her father's. "Zoe, it's horrible." Lorraine, her best friend, wailed across the phone lines with typical drama. It should have been comforting. "What's horrible?" Zoe gasped with a pounding heart. Had the hospital phoned Lorraine's house because she wasn't home? "We're moving." "What?" A moment's confusion. "Dad got that job in Oregon." "Oregon? My God, Lorraine. Venus." "Almost." Zoe sat down in the straight-backed chair beside the phone table. It wasn't her father. It wasn't death calling, but..."When?" she asked. "Two weeks." "So soon?" Zoe wrapped and unwrapped the phone cord around her fist. This isn't happening, she thought. "They want him right away. He's flying out tonight. Can you believe it? He's going to look for a house when he gets there. I got home and Diane was calling up moving companies." "But you said he wasn't serious." "Shows how much he tells me, doesn't it? Diane knew." Zoe grasped for soomething to say. Couldn't something stop this? "Isn't she freaked at the rush?" "Oh, she thinks it's great. It's a place nuclear fallout will miss, and she can grow lots of zucchini." "What about your mom?" "She wouldn't care if he moved to Australia. But she's pretty pissed that he's taking me." "Can't you stay with her?" Please, please, Zoe begged silently. "Oh, you know. That's a lost battle. Cramp her style." "Lorraine! She's not that bad." "She moved out, didn't she?" No use fighting that argument again, Zoe thought. "Oregon." She sighed. Lorraine groaned. "Yeah! This is hideous. It's the wilderness or something. I'm not reading for the great trek. I could stay with you," she added hopefully. "I'll ask," Zoe said, although there wasn't a chance. They both knew that was impossible right now. "Nah!" "What will I do? Zoe thought. "You can visit." It seemed like a pathetic suggestion. "Big deal!" "Yeah." "Can you come over?" Lorraine asked. "No, I better stay here for now." "Uh-oh! Something wrong?" "She's in the hospital again." "Oh, hell." This is where Lorraine shuts down, Zoe thought. Why can't she talk to me about it? Why does she have to back off every time? She's my best friend, damn it, not like those nerds at school who are too embarrassed even to look at me anymore. She searched for what she wanted to say. Something to keep Lorraine on the line. There was silence. Excerpted from The Silver Kiss by Annette Curtis Klause All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Publishers Weekly Review

PW praised the ``often striking prose'' in this compelling tale of a modern-day vampire who preys on a lonely teenaged girl. Ages 12-up. (Sept.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

School Library Journal Review

A well-drawn, powerful, and seductive novel. One evening, when 17 - year - old Zoe is sitting in the park contemplating her mother's imminent death due to cancer, her father's lack of support , and her best friend's move, she meets Simon. Simon is startlingly handsome and strangely compelling. As their friendship grows over time, Simon reveals to Zoe his true identity: he is a vampire, trying to kill his younger vampire brother. In a forceful conclusion, Simon accomplishes his mission and commits suicide. Zoe, in turn, comes to grips with her problems and finds an inner strength to cope. All the characters are skillfully portrayed and highly believable. Dialogue is superb. Simon and Zoe, each with their own problems, come together, and are able to draw strength from one another. Klause blends their struggle into a fine novel, integrating story, history, and a bit of vampire lore. The climax is a roller-coaster ride in reality, the macabre, death, and love. The subject matter and simple language will make The Silver Kiss a haunting choice for reluctant readers. It is easier to read than Meredith Pierce's Darkangel (Little, 1982). A book that's bound to be popular with teens, not only for its spellbinding story, but also for its theme of good vs. evil. --Molly Kinney, North Dade Regional Library, Miami, FL (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Booklist Review

Gr. 8^-12. There's inherent romantic appeal in the vampire legend, and Klause weaves all the gory details into a poignant modern love story that becomes both sensuous and suspenseful.

Horn Book Review

A novel of a young girl struggling to accept the impending death of her mother is curiously interwoven with her entanglement with a vampire. The theme is death; the fascinating, beautiful vampire is certainly charged with sexual allure, but the plot is seriously flawed, and the setting is unclear. An uneven but interesting first novel. From HORN BOOK 1990, (c) Copyright 2010. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Powered by Koha