Enchantée

Enchantée

by Gita Trelease

Narrated by Justine Eyre

Unabridged — 12 hours, 56 minutes

Enchantée

Enchantée

by Gita Trelease

Narrated by Justine Eyre

Unabridged — 12 hours, 56 minutes

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Overview

Love. Magic. Revolution...

Paris is a labyrinth of twisted streets filled with beggars and thieves, revolutionaries and magicians. Camille Durbonne is one of them. She wishes she weren't...

When smallpox kills her parents, Camille must find a way to provide for her younger sister while managing her volatile brother. Relying on magic, Camille painstakingly transforms scraps of metal into money to buy food and medicine they need. But when the coins won't hold their shape and her brother disappears with the family's savings, Camille pursues a richer, more dangerous mark: the glittering court of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette.

Using dark magic forbidden by her mother, Camille transforms herself into a baroness and is swept up into life at the Palace of Versailles, where aristocrats both fear and hunger for magic. As she struggles to reconcile her resentment of the rich with the allure of glamour and excess, Camille meets a handsome young inventor, and begins to believe that love and liberty may both be possible.

But magic has its costs, and soon Camille loses control of her secrets. And when revolution erupts, Camille must choose—love or loyalty, democracy or aristocracy, reality of magic—before Paris burns.


Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

11/19/2018
On the cusp of the French Revolution, 17-year-old Camille Durbonne and her 15-year-old sister are struggling to survive after being orphaned, then robbed by their abusive alcoholic brother. Camille has been using la magie ordinaire to transform metal scraps into coin, but getting caught when it changes back is a constant threat, and the rent is far past due. With the help of more dangerous magic, her mother’s enchanted dress, and a few drops of blood, Camille infiltrates Marie Antoinette’s court in disguise. There, her talent for manipulating cards fills her pockets with currency. Rebellion is in Camille’s blood, and she’s shocked to find herself befriending young nobles despite their politics of privilege. But as she becomes addicted to the magic and the opportunities it affords, Camille begins to wonder about the price of freedom. While debut author Trelease’s twist on the Cinderella story offers some diversity with gay and biracial characters—Camille’s love interest is an aeronaut of French and Indian descent—too much attention is given to the minutiae and intrigue of court life, leaving themes of diversity under-explored. Nevertheless, Camille’s desire to be a voice of change for the oppressed will resonate. Ages 12–up. Agent: Molly Ker Hawn, the Bent Agency. (Feb.)

From the Publisher

NPR Best Book of the Year
Book of the Month Club Pick

“A soaring success. I can think of no more satisfying way to fly across the years and enjoy a gilded view of Paris as it never was but could have been, with a little magic.” —NPR

“Romance and fantasy readers will enjoy the magic realism, ruse and tension of Camille's double identity, authentic historical references, and Camille's daring, passionate spirit. A must-have.” —School Library Journal, starred review

“An immersive, glittering debut that intriguingly blends history and fantasy. A striking examination of power, privilege, and choice in a limited world makes Trelease a new voice to watch.” —Booklist

“Set against the burgeoning throes of revolution, this immersive drama makes brilliant use of its conceit. Fans of substantial historical romance as well as fantasy will be thoroughly enchanted.” —The Bulletin

“An extended riff on Charles Perrault’s version of the Cinderella tale, this is an ambitious, rich and absorbing debut, featuring intrigues, balloons, midnight games of hide-and-seek among the fountains at Versailles. Gita Trelease’s [debut] is a fine teen novel that deals with concealment and identity: the young characters experiment, hiding and revealing secrets, as France tries to forge a new path. This is a thrilling account of love, passion and adventure.” —Literary Review (UK)

“A triumph which should keep young readers enthralled to the meticulously plotted end.” —The Telegraph (UK)

“A sparkling, decadent confection of a book, one with a hidden bite. Its sumptuous and evocative Paris has magical depths that will enthrall you. Be careful. Once you start reading, you won't stop until the final page.” —Jessica Cluess, author of A Shadow Bright and Burning

“A sumptuous, slow burn of a book that builds to an exciting conclusion. This is a book to be savored: from the rich, detailed descriptions of Paris on the brink of revolution; to the witty repartee and tender romance; to the dark, dangerous thread of magic woven through this wonderfully vivid world that Gita Trelease has crafted. I didn't want it to end!” —Rosalyn Eves, author of Blood Rose Rebellion

“Deliciously addictive—a lit firework crackling with treacherous magic, decadent romance, and disguises that take on lives of their own. I adore this gorgeous book.” —Stephanie Garber, author of Caraval

“Air balloons and intrigue, magic and mayhem, all in a sumptuous Paris on the verge of revolution—a delight from beginning to end.” —Alison Goodman, author of The Dark Days Club

“An intoxicating blend of opulence, magic, intrigue and romance. Gita Trelease deftly balances a spellbinding story of desperation and deceit on the precipice of the epic revolution that changed history. J’étais enchantée par ce livre.” —Alwyn Hamilton, author of Rebel of the Sands

“A heady, sparkling dream of a book. I tumbled head over heels into Gita Trelease’s dark and sumptuous magical Paris and wanted to stay there forever. One of the best fantasies I’ve read in years.” —Margaret Rogerson, author of An Enchantment of Ravens

“An utterly beguiling spell that lingers long after the final page.” —Laura Sebastian, author of Ash Princess

School Library Journal

★ Winter 2018

Gr 9 Up–Against the tumultuous backdrop of the French Revolution, two orphaned sisters, Camille and Sophie, struggle to survive on the streets of Paris. Possessing an inherited gift of magic from her once-aristocratic mother, Camille begins "turning" coins and cards for rent and food. When her debt-ridden, abusive older brother, Alain, steals their meager earnings, Camille is determined to save herself and Sophie. She conjures deeper, darker magic, creating a double identity, Baroness Cecile Descharlots, with a new appearance, elegant dress, and access to the gaming tables at Versailles. Even as she prospers and befriends courtiers and vicomtes, Camille's double life begins to fray. Her aeronaut boyfriend, Lazare, is hiding his own secrets. She suspects an ardent court admirer, Vicomte Seguin, of sinister intentions and destructive magic. Her pursuit of fortune in the royal court conflicts with her empathy for the common man. Then, Sophie disappears. Multiple threads of history are woven into this tale: the role and persecution of magicians in the French court; experiments with balloon aeronautics; contemporaneous attitudes toward women, queer folks, and biracial nobility; the opulent, decadent lifestyle of Marie Antoinette and Louis XVI; and, the rising outrage of impoverished citizens. Informative historical notes and a French glossary are appended. Distinctive characters, vivid 18th-century images of Paris and Versailles, lively French-infused dialogue, an appealing heroine, and an upbeat ending propel this lengthy romantic fantasy. VERDICT Romance and fantasy readers will enjoy the magic realism, ruse and tension of Camille's double identity, authentic historical references, and Camille's daring, passionate spirit. A must-have.—Gerry Larson, formerly at Durham School of the Arts, NC

FEBRUARY 2019 - AudioFile

Narrator Justine Eyre helps transport listeners to prerevolutionary France and the intrigues of Louis XVI's court. After her parents die and her brother fails to offer protection, Camille becomes the penniless guardian of her younger sister. Her only asset is an enchanted dress, which temporarily transforms her into a fashionable beauty, allowing her entrance to Versailles, where she hopes to use magic to win at cards and amass a comfortable nest egg. Eyre’s aristocratic accent, mixed with French, sets the atmosphere for this Cinderella story. Eyre provides dramatic tension, capturing Camille’s constant fear of being revealed as an imposter, the gentry’s easy disregard for commoners, and the sinister motives of a fellow gambler. Period details, some romance, and an exciting ending create a satisfying listen. C.B.L. © AudioFile 2019, Portland, Maine

Kirkus Reviews

2018-10-28

In an alternate history, a teenage girl weaves magic to survive in revolutionary Paris.

Camille has always hated using la magie ordinaire, a magic that draws from sorrow to transform knickknacks into coins—a necessity to make ends meet for her and her sister since her parents died of smallpox. When their abusive addict brother steals their meager savings, Camille resorts to a darker magic—a dress and makeup enchanted by magie bibelot—to transform her appearance and, combined with la magie ordinaire, becomes a practiced gambler at Versailles, where she falls in with a small group of card-playing aristocrats. But all is not as it seems, and as she becomes increasingly addicted to la magie and the French Revolution looms, Camille discovers she's not the only magician at court. With detailed descriptions and uneven pacing, the book sometimes feels overstuffed. Camille has a slow-burn romance with a biracial French/Indian balloonist, and race and racism are lightly touched upon. Camille's first friend at court is gay, and here too homophobia is implied but is not explored in depth. Camille and other main characters are white.

Somewhat like its protagonist, Trelease's debut at times falls a little flat despite its ideal trappings and never rises to extraordinaire. (glossary, historical note) (Historical fantasy. 12-18)

Product Details

BN ID: 2940172068928
Publisher: Macmillan Audio
Publication date: 02/05/2019
Series: Enchantée Series , #1
Edition description: Unabridged
Age Range: 12 - 17 Years

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

Yves Rencourt, the chandler's apprentice, had lost his wig.

After the last customer left the shop, he searched through baskets of curling wicks and blocks of beeswax and teetering stacks of bills. Rien. It was nowhere to be found. And he needed the wig for tonight: he alone was to deliver candles for the Comte d'Astignac's party, which would last until the sun came up. This was Yves's chance to be noticed. To rise. And he didn't want to show up wearing his own hair, looking ridiculous. He had to look promising. Like someone who could be Somebody.

At least his coat was good, he thought, as he lifted the dove-gray silk from its hook and shrugged it on. And voilà — there the damned wig was, its long white hair tied back with a black satin bow. He pulled the wig on and cocked an admiring eyebrow at his reflection in the window: he was no longer a tradesman's apprentice. He was absolument parfait.

Into a canvas satchel he tucked his most precious candles, the ones he'd tinted the hazy apricots and violets of dawn. All he needed now was money for the carriage. From under the counter he heaved up the strongbox and lifted its lid to reveal a shining pile of coins: rivulets of gold louis and livres and tiny sous. Candles were good business. No matter how little bread there was, how few people bought snuffboxes or plumed hats, they all needed light. In the back, Maître Orland kept the cheap tallow candles that reeked of hooves. They sold more of those every day. But in the front of the shop, nestled in boxes and dangling from their wicks were Yves's own lovelies: wax candles, their colors like enchantments. A rose pink that made old women seem young, a watery gray that reminded him of the ocean. And one day soon — he dreamed — he'd make candles for the queen.

For like himself, Marie Antoinette loved extraordinary things. Yves would make candles to suit her every fancy, candles she'd never even dreamed of. He'd be asked to make thousands, because in the endless rooms and halls of Versailles, candles were never lit twice.

From his coat pocket he pulled a leather purse and began to flick livres into the bag. Clink, clink, clink. But one coin made him pause. It was a louis d'or, seemingly no different from the others. Yet to someone who handled candles, always checking the soft wax for imperfections, it felt off. Holding it to the fading afternoon light, he saw nothing wrong. He put the gold coin between his teeth and bit it. It was as hard as any other. And yet. He found another louis and held one in each hand, weighing them. He closed his eyes. Yes — the one in his right hand was lighter. Still, who but a true craftsman such as himself would notice? He was about toss it back in the box when it twitched.

The louis d'or was moving.

Yves yelped and flung it onto the counter. The coin spun in a tight circle and dropped flat. As it lay there, its edges began to ripple, like beeswax in a flame.

"Mon Dieu," he muttered. What in God's name was happening?

The louis twisted upon itself and flipped over. The king's face with its curved nose had vanished, the familiar crown and shield, too. And as Yves stared, the coin lost its roundness, thinning and separating until it looked like a bent harness buckle. He reached out a tentative finger to touch it.

It was a bent harness buckle.

With a cry, he reached for the strongbox. Mixed in with the coins was an ugly tin button, dented on one side, and a crooked piece of type, a letter Q. Worthless scraps of metal.

He remembered her exactly. He'd even flirted with her. Red hair, freckles across her sharp cheekbones. Hungry. Not that that excused it. How she'd done it he had no idea — but what a fool he was to take a gold louis from a girl in a threadbare cloak. If he hadn't been dreaming of the figure he'd cut at the comte's house, he would have thought twice. Idiot! Maître Orland was going to kill him.

He wrenched open the door and yelled into the crowded street. "Help! Police! We've been robbed!"

CHAPTER 2

But Camille had already slipped away through the arches of an arcade, across a tiny cobbled square, down a narrow lane perfumed by the scent of fresh bread, and into the bakery, where she now stood. She set her heavy basket, filled with candles and a rind of cheese, on the floor between her feet.

She inhaled deeply. Heaven must be like this. Like piles of raisin-studded rolls, braided brioches that flaked a rain of buttery gold when you bit into them, baguettes as long as your arm and still warm inside, sweet pastries that made your mouth water. The women ahead of her took their time, complaining about the cost of bread.

"Don't blame me," the baker's wife snapped. "Blame the weather! Blame the queen! She'd rather fill her wardrobe than her people's bellies."

"It's true!" another woman grumbled. "Madame Déficit spends money like it's going out of style. And how does she pay for it all?" The woman grimaced. "With our money! They'll tax us even after we're dead and in the ground."

Camille's fingers twitched with impatience. People complained about the king and queen and they complained about the nobles, even when there was absolutely nothing that could be done to change things. Her father the printer had called the nobles bloodsuckers, but even he'd needed their business.

Hurry. Soon it would be evening, shadows gathering in the city's crooked places. Pickpockets would slink out, madams looking to trap young girls, men who didn't keep their hands to themselves.

"Oui, mademoiselle?"

Camille nodded at the day-old loaves. "I'll take one of those." She hesitated. "And a sweet pastry, s'il vous plaît."

Snugging her cloak around her shoulders, Camille stepped out into the lane. Over the rooftops of Paris, the sky hung like a lead curtain, and the air tasted of metal. This morning she'd found a skin of ice stretched over the water jug in the kitchen. But cold May or not, there was nothing for it; she had one last errand and the blurry sun was already sinking behind the towers of Notre-Dame. Leaving the lane for a busy street, Camille dodged piles of manure and pools of horse piss, not to mention whatever filth people tossed from their windows. To keep from gagging, she burrowed her nose into her worn cloak. It smelled faintly of her mother's perfume.

Her pocket felt too large and empty, only a few sous wedged against its lining. With her fingertips, she traced the coins' thin edges. Still round. She didn't dare to take them out and count them, not on the street. There'd be enough for Alain's wine.

As long as the coins didn't change.

At the wine merchant's, she chewed the edge of her fingernail, waiting for him to fill a wine bottle from a barrel. When she left, she kept her basket pressed close to her side. She avoided the quarter's crumbling passageways, their entrances as narrow as the doors of tombs. She could almost feel the hands that waited there. Somewhere above her in the tilting buildings, a child sobbed.

As Camille turned the corner, a girl as young as her sister came running down the street. Her white face was rouged with hectic circles, her hair aflame, her eyebrows darkened to seduce, and her corset pulled tight to give curves to her child's body. Under the dirty hem of her dress, bare feet flashed as she dodged shoppers and workmen.

"Stop, whore!" shouted a constable as he pushed through the crowd.

A prickling of fear made Camille pull her cloak up over her own red hair. But she couldn't take her eyes from the half-dressed girl, running like a spreading fire. She was living the life Camille feared — her nightmares made flesh.

"You there!" the constable shouted at Camille.

"Stop her!"

Camille shrank back against the wall. As the running girl dashed closer, Camille glimpsed the whites of her eyes in the half-dark. The raw leanness of her face, the bruises on her arms — and the tiny roll of bread she clutched in her hand. How many days could she make that last while her stomach churned with hunger? And then what? Camille felt in her pocket for her last few real sous.

"Thief!" yelled the constable. His face was wild with anger as the girl slipped away through the crowds.

It was too risky. Camille clenched her empty hand as the sadness welled up inside her. It was wrong not to help — but it was too dangerous. With the constable coming, there was nothing she could do. The horror of living on the streets was too big, a wall of fear that blocked out everything.

As the girl fled past, her scared eyes flicked to Camille's.

Then both girls vanished into darkening Paris.

CHAPTER 3

Camille lived at the top of an ancient building on the rue Charlot. The stone building had once stood proudly, but now it leaned against its neighbor, as if tired from standing straight all those years. Unlocking a heavy door, Camille let herself into the courtyard. In the close darkness, a dog yelped; a neighbor's hen flapped against her skirts. Up in their garret window, a light glowed: Alain had returned. She imagined her older brother hanging up his officer's cloak and kicking off his boots, sitting by the fire and roaring with laughter at some jest, tickling the cat. The way he used to be.

She started to climb the stairs, the heavy basket bumping against her legs. The once-grand staircase spiraled up seven treacherous flights, but she knew where the rotten spots were. As she passed the third-floor landing, a door swung open.

"Mademoiselle Durbonne? A word." Wearing a grease-flecked apron, Madame Lamotte raised her candlestick toward Camille. "The rent is two weeks overdue. This is not a charity home."

Camille blinked. She had nothing close to the full rent of two hundred livres — eight fat gold louis — and she couldn't risk giving magicked coins to Madame. When they reverted to scraps — and they would, because Camille couldn't get the metal to hold its shape — Madame would throw them out, bien sûr, no matter how much she'd liked their parents and felt sorry for the orphans. Then they would be tramps, living under a bridge. Prostitutes. Or dead.

Camille hated to beg. "A few days?"

Madame Lamotte nodded begrudgingly. Camille curtsied and began to climb the stairs again. "One more thing," the landlady called after her. "Your brother."

Camille stopped. Even Madame had noticed. "I'm sorry," she said, trying to keep the exasperation from her voice.

"I haven't said anything yet!"

"Go on, madame." If it had to do with Alain, it was bound to be bad news.

The landlady pitched her voice low. "Just be careful. Keep an eye on him."

"Of course, madame." It was impossible, a fairytale task. It'd take a thousand eyes to watch him.

When Camille reached the seventh floor, she paused, listening. Was that — music? She opened the door to their apartment. In the middle of the bare room, her little sister, Sophie, was dancing a sarabande while Alain piped on his army piccolo. In the candlelight, her hair shone pale gold, her wide-set blue eyes bright with amusement. She looked so much like their mother with her delicate features and slightly upturned nose, a princess in one of Perrault's fairy tales. Sophie had always been small: feet and hands dainty as cats' paws, an enviable waist that seemed even tinier as her skirts spun around her.

When Sophie saw Camille, she paused midstep. Her face was happy but flushed, the pulse racing in her neck.

"Join the revels, Camille!" Alain lounged in the best chair, boots on the table. The fire's light caught on the scruff of his unshaven cheek, while the cocked hat he wore slid the rest of his face into shadow. His hair, once golden like Sophie's, had darkened to amber and was tied with a black ribbon that threatened to come undone.

"I know you love to dance, darling," Camille said carefully as she watched Alain out of the corner of her eye, "but you've been so ill —"

"Alain asked me to." Sophie's narrow chest heaved. "He wanted to see if I was still a good dancer."

"And she is!" Alain's smile gleamed. "I'll find her a husband yet. See if I don't."

"Don't tease, Alain. No one will marry me now." Sophie bent her head so her hair hid the few smallpox scars on her forehead. "Isn't that so, Camille?"

Camille hesitated. There was no good answer to this question.

"Whatever Camille says, don't listen! At court the grand ladies wear beauty patches to cover their pocks." Alain raised his wineglass. "To Sophie! Keep up your dancing and your needlework, and we'll find you a husband, handsome as a prince."

"She's fifteen, Alain." Camille shot him a dark look. "Come sit by the fire, Sophie. Catch your breath while I put out the food. Boots down, Alain." She gave his feet a shove; it was a relief to set the heavy basket down. Brushing off the table, she placed the cheese and bread, along with a knife, on a scarred wooden board. The sweet pastry she handed to Sophie.

"Oh, it's too much," she said, but her face shone.

"Bien! Fatten her up, Camille. You've let her go to skin and bones."

Camille nearly snapped: I let her? It was my fault? but she pressed the words down.

"Something in the basket for me?" Alain demanded.

Camille set the flask of wine on the table.

"Bien — nicely done," he said. "Pour yourself a little glass, too. We've plenty now."

"What do you mean, 'plenty'?" She saw a bottle by the fireplace and her heart sank. "Alain, where's the chicken?"

"What chicken?"

Camille sensed Sophie stiffen. The room suddenly felt very, very small.

"You know how Monsieur Dimnier always admired Maman?" Camille kept her voice even. "I asked you to pick up the chicken he'd set aside for us. One that hadn't gained weight, one he'd had to kill early."

Alain frowned. "You didn't tell me anything about a skinny chicken."

She had, but it didn't matter now. "I'll go fetch it; it's not far." Camille held out her hand. "I'll need the money back."

Alain laughed. "You'd better make some more, then, because I don't have it."

"What?"

"Just what I said." Alain took a swig of wine and wiped his mouth with his sleeve. "It's gone."

"You can't just squander our real money!" She reached into her pocket. Just as she'd thought, apart from a few real sous, the rest had lost their magic and were now what they'd been this morning: bent, useless nails she'd pried out of a broken door. "I can't pay Dimnier with this!" she stormed. "We have to give him real money, remember? If he stops selling to us, what then?" She threw the nails onto the table so hard they caromed to the floor.

Alain shrugged. "Just go farther away."

Camille stamped her foot. "There is nowhere else! You've no idea how far I had to go just for the bread. Dimnier's the last one in our quarter who trusts us. And you threw away our chicken for a bottle of wine."

"How was I to know you'd remember to buy some?"

Blood thrummed in Camille's head. It wasn't easy to make ends meet using la magie ordinaire — everyday magic — to transform bits of metal into coins. These days, her hands never stopped shaking, and she'd become nearly as thin as Sophie. Little by little, magic was erasing her. Sometimes she felt it might kill her.

She grabbed the bottle of wine.

"Don't." Alain swayed to his feet. "Give that to me."

"You don't deserve it!" Hoisting the bottle over her head, Camille hurled it into the washing tub. A grinding shatter — and the acrid scent of wine filled the room.

Alain grabbed the knife on the table and pointed it at her. "That was my wine."

"It was mine, idiot. I worked for it. I bought it."

"Hush, Camille!" Sophie said, desperate. "Please don't argue! Alain stands in our father's place now. You must listen to him."

Camille rounded on her sister. "Our father wasn't a nineteen-year-old wastrel!"

Alain lurched toward Camille, steadying himself on the table. Despite the cold, his face glistened with sweat. His eyes had a faraway look that raised the tiny hairs on her neck.

"Go sleep it off, Alain. I'll clean up — comme d'habitude," she added in an undertone. As always.

Before she could think, his knife was at her throat. She froze, sensing each throb of her pulse just under the skin.

"What are you doing, Alain? Put away the knife."

Alain's hand shook, and then — a bright line of pain. A trickle of blood curled into the hollow of her collarbone, hot and wet. All these weeks of threatening to hurt her, and now, drunk on who knows how many bottles of wine, he finally had. She wanted to rage and to weep at the injustice of it. But she did not flinch.

"You aren't my master, Camille Durbonne," Alain growled. "I'm a soldier, and I earn my keep."

"Then go earn it. Show up for duty for once. Pay the rent." She didn't move. Everything in her was shouting at her to run, but she would never let him see her fear. Never. "I can't keep on like this."

"Oh, I'll do my part. And in the meantime," he said, so close that Camille was forced to inhale the sour stink of his breath, "do the only thing you're good for. Go work la magie." Dropping the knife, he stumbled toward the door and flung it open.

(Continues…)


Excerpted from "Enchantée: Chapter Sampler"
by .
Copyright © 2019 Gita Trelease.
Excerpted by permission of Flatiron Books.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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