Princess Academy (Princess Academy #1)

by Shannon Hale (Author)

Reading Level: 4th − 5th Grade

While attending a strict academy for potential princesses with the other girls from her mountain village, fourteen-year-old Miri discovers unexpected talents and connections to her homeland.

Miri lives on a mountain where, for generations, her ancestors have quarried stone and lived a simple life. Then word comes that the king's priests have divined her small village the home of the future princess. In a year's time, the prince himself will come and choose his bride from among the girls of the village.

The king's ministers set up an academy on the mountain, and every teenage girl must attend and learn how to become a princess. Soon Miri finds herself confronted with a harsh academy mistress, bitter competition among the girls, and her own conflicting desires.

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ALA/Booklist

Strong suspense and plot drive the action as the girls outwit would-be kidnappers and explore the boundaries of leadership, competition, and friendship.

None

Starred Review
The climax involving evil brigands is a bit forced, but everything else is an unalloyed joy.

None

Her imaginary world, peopled by strong yet vulnerable characters, is quietly memorable.

School Library Journal

Starred Review

The thought of being a princess never occurred to the girls living on Mount Eskel. Most plan to work in the quarry like the generations before them. When it is announced that the prince will choose a bride from their village, 14-year-old Miri, who thinks she is being kept from working in the quarry because of her small stature, believes that this is her opportunity to prove her worth to her father. All eligible females are sent off to attend a special academy where they face many challenges and hardships as they are forced to adapt to the cultured life of a lowlander. First, strict Tutor Olana denies a visit home. Then, they are cut off from their village by heavy winter snowstorms. As their isolation increases, competition builds among them. The story is much like the mountains, with plenty of suspenseful moments that peak and fall, building into the next intense event. Miri discovers much about herself, including a special talent called quarry speak, a silent way to communicate. She uses this ability in many ways, most importantly to save herself and the other girls from harm. Each girl's story is brought to a satisfying conclusion, but this is not a fluffy, predictable fairy tale, even though it has wonderful moments of humor. Instead, Hale weaves an intricate, multilayered story about families, relationships, education, and the place we call home." -Linda L. Plevak, Saint Mary's Hall, San Antonio, TX"

Copyright 2005 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

Publishers Weekly

Readers enchanted by Hale's "Goose Girl" are in for an experience that's a bit more earthbound in this latest fantasy-cum-tribute to girl-power. Cheerful and witty 14-year-old Miri loves her life on Mount Eskel, home to the quarries filled with the most precious linder stone in the land, though she longs to be big and strong enough to do quarry work like her sister and father. But Miri experiences big changes when the king announces that the prince will choose a potential wife from among the village's eligible girls -and that said girls must attend a new Princess Academy in preparation. Princess training is not all it's cracked up to be for spunky Miri in the isolated school overseen by cruel Tutor Olana. But through education -and the realization that she has the common mountain power to communicate wordlessly via magical "quarry-speech" -Miri and the girls eventually gain confidence and knowledge that helps transform their village. Unfortunately, Hale's lighthearted premise and underlying romantic plot bog down in overlong passages about commerce and class, a surprise hostage situation and the specifics of "quarry-speech." The prince's final princess selection hastily and patly wraps things up. Ages 9-up. "(July)"

Copyright 2005 Publishers Weekly Used with permission.

Shannon Hale
Shannon and Dean Hale are the award-winning husband-and-wife team behind The Princess in Black, illustrated by LeUyen Pham. Shannon Hale is also the author of the Newbery Honor novel Princess Academy as well as the New York Times best-selling series Ever After High. Shannon and Dean Hale live in Salt Lake City, Utah.

LeUyen Pham is the illustrator of many books for children, including God's Dream by Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Douglas Carlton Abrams and Aunt Mary's Rose by Douglas Wood, as well as the Freckleface Strawberry books by Julianne Moore. LeUyen Pham lives in California.
Classification
-
ISBN-13
9781582349930
Lexile Measure
890
Guided Reading Level
-
Publisher
Bloomsbury U.S.A. Children's Books
Publication date
July 01, 2005
Series
Princess Academy
BISAC categories
JUV037000 - Juvenile Fiction | Fantasy & Magic
JUV039000 - Juvenile Fiction | Social Themes | General
JUV014000 - Juvenile Fiction | Girls & Women
JUV034000 - Juvenile Fiction | Royalty (kings queens princes princesses knights etc.)
Library of Congress categories
Self-confidence
Schools
Princesses
Mountains
Telepathy
Newbery Medal
Honor Book 2006 - 2006
Volunteer State Book Awards
Nominee 2007 - 2008
Dorothy Canfield Fisher Children's Book Award
Nominee 2007 - 2007
Beehive Awards
Winner 2007 - 2007
Young Reader's Choice Award
Nominee 2008 - 2008
Grand Canyon Reader Award
Nominee 2008 - 2008
Rebecca Caudill Young Readers Book Award
Nominee 2008 - 2008
Sunshine State Young Reader's Award
Nominee 2008 - 2008
Massachusetts Children's Book Award
Nominee 2007 - 2008
Colorado Children's Book Award
Nominee 2008 - 2008
Georgia Children's Book Award
Alternate 2008 - 2008
Nene Award
Recommended 2010 - 2010
Sequoyah Book Awards
Nominee 2008 - 2008
South Carolina Childrens, Junior and Young Adult Book Award
Nominee 2007 - 2008
William Allen White Childens Book Award
Nominee 2008 - 2008
Utah Book Award
Winner 2005 - 2005

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