Record Details



Enlarge cover image for Between the lines : a novel / Jodi Picoult & Samantha van Leer ; illustrations by Yvonne Gilbert & Scott M. Fischer. Book

Between the lines : a novel / Jodi Picoult & Samantha van Leer ; illustrations by Yvonne Gilbert & Scott M. Fischer.

Picoult, Jodi, 1966- (author.). Leer, Samantha van, (author.). Gilbert, Yvonne, (illustrator.). Fischer, Scott M., (illustrator.).

Summary:

Told in their separate voices, sixteen-year-old Prince Oliver, who wants to break free of his fairy tale existence, and fifteen-year-old Delilah, a loner obsessed with Prince Oliver and the book in which he exists, work together to seek his freedom.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781451635751
  • Physical Description: 352 pages : illustrations (some colour) ; 24 cm
  • Edition: First Simon Pulse/Emily Bestler Books/Atria Books hardcover edition.
  • Publisher: New York : Simon Pulse/Emily Bestler Books/Atria, 2012.
Subject:
Books and reading > Fiction.
Fairy tales > Fiction.
Princes > Fiction.
High schools > Fiction.
Mothers and daughters > Fiction.
Young adult fiction.

Available copies

  • 16 of 16 copies available at BC Interlibrary Connect. (Show)
  • 1 of 1 copy available at Fort St. James Public Library.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 16 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
Fort St. James Public Library PIC (Between the Lines #1) (Text) 35196000180120 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -

  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2012 May #1
    Quirky loner Delilah discovers a fairy tale in her high-school library and develops a raging crush on its handsome prince. She is startled but delighted to discover that he can actually see her and speak to her. In alternating chapters Oliver and Delilah relate their adventures in liberating Oliver from the two-dimensional page into Delilah's three-dimensional world. Picoult's teenage daughter pitched the idea to her mother, and together the two have created a compulsively readable charmer. The teen dialogue and interior monologues feel authentic, while Picoult's practiced hand balances humor with larger issues such as abandonment, hope, and existential quandaries related to fate and human nature. Both silhouette and pencil drawings abound; characters climb in and around the text to excellent effect. Younger readers and their parents will appreciate the gentle, wholesome romance, with nary a shred of paranormal action. The tender, positive tone and effective pacing that builds to a satisfying finish will inspire readers to pass the book to a friend—or reread it themselves. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Picoult's brand-name presence on the cover will draw readers for her first foray into YA lit, and a mother-daughter tour will help spread the word. Copyright 2012 Booklist Reviews.
  • BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2012 July
    Fairy tale magic from a mother-daughter duo

    What would it be like if your favorite character from a book came to life and left his fictional world behind to join you in reality? Jodi Picoult teams up with her 16-year-old daughter Samantha van Leer to answer that question in a clever and charming new novel for teens.

    Between the Lines features high school outcast Delilah McPhee, who falls for the hero of a strange children's book. This fairy tale prince is not only "cuter than any guy" in Delilah's school, he's also smart, sensitive and courageous. Can she find a way to get Oliver off the page and into the real world where they'll live happily ever after?

    We asked the mother-daughter writing pair to tell us more about how they created this delightful fractured fairy tale.

    Sammy, this is your first book, and Jodi, this is your first teen book. What was it like venturing into uncharted territory?
    Jodi: I've been asked to write versions of my books for younger readers who might not be emotionally ready for some of the content of my grownup novels, and I've always said no—I'd rather tell the story the way I need to tell it, and have the kid wait till he/she is ready to read it in that form, instead of a watered-down version. But this story, which was 100 percent Sammy's idea, was so different, and so cool—who hasn't had a wicked crush on a character in a book at some point in her life? It felt rich enough to be a chapter book, and was a concept I thought both adults and teens could relate to.

    Sammy: It was a lot of hard work, but in the end I was able to create something I could be extremely proud of. I've written in the past but I've never actually completed anything quite like this in terms of size and scope. I had lots of fun imagining an entire other world where I got to essentially decide the fate of everyone living inside. It was a power I've never had before!

    "Delilah does something many of us think about: She literally gets inside the world of a book."

    Was it always a dream for the two of you to collaborate?
    Jodi: Sammy has always been incredibly creative, and a great writer. There have been story ideas she's had that are so wildly original I'd find myself thinking, "I wish I'd been the one to come up with that." I wasn't sure if she'd have the desire or the fortitude, however, to take on a long-term collaborative project. Although it was her idea, I knew that having my experience crafting something of this magnitude would help—and that I'd be the one reining her in on sunny days when it would have been far more fun to sit outside than to be at a computer writing. I can't say whether it was a dream for Sammy . . . but it was an unforgettable and wonderful experience for me to have with my own daughter.

    How was the creation and writing of the story divided between you?
    Sammy:
    We sat down together during the summer of my freshman year and every day we'd write for about four hours. Sophomore summer we spent the same amount of time each day editing. This summer—after my junior year—I'll spend on tour. As for the actual division of labor, we sat side by side and wrote together, having a conversation or role-playing and writing it down.

    What's the best and worst thing about writing with family?
    Jodi:
    The worst thing, of course, is that even when we're writing, I'm still the mom. That means I am not only the one saying, "We have to finish 20 pages today," I'm also saying, "Clean your room." But the best thing is that I found our minds worked similarly in remarkable ways. We would literally write every sentence together, taking turns typing. I'd start to speak a sentence and Sammy would finish, or vice-versa. It was as if we were dreaming the same dream, and falling all over each other to describe what we were seeing, only to realize the vision in each of our minds was identical.

    What sparks the attraction between Delilah and Oliver? Why do you think she connects so strongly with him when she's a loner around real people?
    Sammy:
    I feel like Delilah is more comfortable in the world of books than she is in the real world. When she uses the fairy tale as an escape from her world, she is able to associate with the characters inside better than she would with ordinary teenagers. The reason Oliver is so compelling for her is because he's nothing like other modern-day teenage boys. He has chivalry, manners, and he also knows what it's like to feel like he doesn't belong in the world he inhabits.

    What is it about Delilah's character that teens will most identify with or admire?
    Sammy:
    Everyone's felt left out sometime—whether it was in high school or even in preschool on the playground. Anyone can identify with feeling lonely. Also, Delilah does something many of us think about: She literally gets inside the world of a book.

    What makes your novel a modern story—even though it's based on a fairy tale?
    Jodi:
    The voice of Delilah—which is very poignant and true, and taps into that teen angst of how to find one's place in a world that doesn't seem to fit. Which, very intentionally, is also the driving force behind Oliver's desire to escape his literary existence. There are bits of Delilah's life that are so real a teen can't help but identify—Sammy came up with one phrase I loved, in fact, where she described popular girls "clustered together like grapes, because really, do you ever see just one?" Who hasn't witnessed that in the halls of a modern high school?

    What's one book you'd love to be a character in?
    Sammy:
    A Dr. Seuss book. It seems like a really happy place to be, full of nonsense and imagination . . . which is a place I'd fit right into.

    What has the process of working together taught you?
    Jodi:
    I've always been proud of Sammy's writing ability, but I was so impressed by her tenacity and her ability to really put in the time and energy required not just to craft a book, but to edit it multiple times, and then tour for eight weeks to promote it across three continents. I learned that I'm not the only story­teller in the family. And I learned that when my daughter wants to put her mind to a task, she can be incredibly successful.

    Copyright 2012 BookPage Reviews.
  • Horn Book Guide Reviews : Horn Book Guide Reviews 2012 Fall
    High school pariah Delilah is delighted (and confused) when the prince in her favorite fairy tale begs to be liberated from the confines of his book. The clever premise never quite pans out. Prince Oliver's story is slow and disjointed, and Delilah remains a morose teen. That any teen would be enamored of Oliver and his lackluster adventure is doubtful.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2012 May #2
    In her first foray into teen fiction, Picoult and her co-author daughter deliver an enjoyable, metafictive twist on the traditional teen-romance novel. Delilah is a 15-year-old, self-professed loner who would rather have her head buried in a book than gossip about boys or play fashion police in the halls between classes. But it's not just any book that Delilah wants to lose herself in; it's an obscure fairy tale called Between the Lines with a dashing young prince who literally comes to life before her very eyes. Prince Oliver is equally captivated with Delilah, and the two embark on a quest to find a way and a world in which they can finally be together. Told from Delilah and Oliver's alternating points of view, this take on the traditional star-crossed-lovers tale will make for a light read for those preteens and early teens who aren't looking for more mature, emotionally complex love stories. Book lovers in particular are likely to get a kick out of the blurring of the lines between character and reader, fact and fiction. Periodic illustrations from the fairy tale Between the Lines function well as reminders of Oliver's fictive "reality," but others, too closely resembling clip art, are distracting and out of place. Fizzy fairy-tale fun. (Fantasy. 9-13) Copyright Kirkus 2012 Kirkus/BPI Communications.All rights reserved.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2012 April #4

    Prolific and bestselling author Picoult teams up with her teenage daughter to pen a clever YA romance about the magical relationship between a loner and her fictional "Prince Charming." Imagine 15-year-old Delilah McPhee's surprise when she starts to have a conversation with Prince Oliver, the hero of a fairy tale she adores. From Oliver she learns that characters in a story lead very different lives when a book is shut—in Oliver's "reality," the story's villain is actually a butterfly aficionado, and Oliver has no interest in his betrothed, Seraphima. Elements from Picoult's other novels—alternating character viewpoints with distinguishing fonts, snappy chapter endings—are present, and the story is peppered with pop culture references to The Hunger Games, the Kindle Fire, and the X-Men, as well as comic relief in the form of characters like a talking horse that thinks it has a weight problem. The reason given for Delilah's obsession with the fairy tale—like her, Oliver grew up without a father—is weak, but that's unlikely to trouble readers who will be swept up by the romantic premise. Ages 12–up. Agent: Laura Gross, Laura Gross Literary Agency. (June)

    [Page ]. Copyright 2012 PWxyz LLC
  • School Library Journal Reviews : SLJ Reviews 2012 August

    Gr 7–10—Fifteen-year-old Delilah likes nothing better than to escape into a book when high school life gets too depressing. But after the hero of her favorite fairy tale comes to life before her eyes, she starts to wonder if she's been spending too much time with books and not enough time with real people. Oliver, a 16-year-old prince, feels trapped in his story, reliving the same scenes over and over. He longs to leave his book, and he is attracted to Delilah, the reader he sees most often hovering above the pages. Delilah and Oliver may be from two different worlds, but they have an emotional connection. Will it be strong enough to bridge the gap that separates fantasy and reality? Written in collaboration with her teenage daughter, this light novel is a departure from Picoult's usual milieu. The story shifts between Delilah's and Oliver's perspectives and is interspersed with sections from the fairy tale in which Oliver is trapped. Full-color and black-and-white illustrations decorate some pages. While the writing style is polished and the pacing is good, the characters lack depth and the ending falls flat. On the whole, this book is a fluffy, fun read for younger teens, but one that lacks emotional punch.—Misti Tidman, Boyd County Public Library, Ashland, KY

    [Page 110]. (c) Copyright 2012. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
  • Voice of Youth Advocates Reviews : VOYA Reviews 2012 June
    Fairy tales are just that: tales. But the characters in Between the Lines have their own lives when the book is closed. Oliver longs to escape his prescribed existence in the book, and Delilah is obsessed with Oliver's book. She reads it constantly because she feels a connection with Oliver since he too grew up without his father. One day Oliver realizes that Delilah can hear him, and they strike up a friendship. The two long to find a way for Oliver to leave the book. The first attempts backfire when only words will leave the book and every time the book is shut everything starts back at square one. Delilah's mother begins to think something is wrong because Delilah will not stop reading this fairy tale and is talking to the book. In a last-ditch effort, Delilah travels to the author's house to see if she can find a way to safely remove Oliver from the book. Picoult and her daughter, Van Leer, have created a multilayered universe where what is real is in the eye of the beholder. All at once, the reader is in the fairy tale, in the world of the book when it is closed, and outside the book. Delilah and Oliver allow the reader to suspend their realities and hope that Oliver finds a way to live outside his predestined world and be with the girl of his dreams.—Barbara Allen. 5Q 5P M J S Copyright 2011 Voya Reviews.