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Ivy

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: UK Oxford Uni Press 2006Description: 352pISBN:
  • 0192754319
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • YA/F/HEA HEA
Fiction notes: Click to open in new window
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Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
General Books General Books Kandy books YA/F/HEA HEA Checked out 21/02/2012 KB44650
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

The only beautiful thing in Ivy's drab life is her glorious red hair. At a young age, her locks made her the target of Carroty Kate, a 'skinner'. She recruited Ivy to help her coax wealthy children away from their nannies so that she could strip them of their clothes - clothes worth a fortune in the markets of Petticoat Lane. It is years before Ivy escapes and finds her way back to her in-laws. Once there, she finds respite in laudanum. But before she can settle into a stupor and forget the terrible things she has done, Ivy is spotted by a wealthy pre-Raphaelite painter. Oscar Fosdick needs a muse (until now he has had to use his domineering mother as a model, something not conducive to producing his best work, he finds). To him, Ivy is perfect, a stunner. Realising quickly that this painter has more money than sense, Ivy's in-laws order her to sit for him, and to do anything else he demands. But not everyone is happy. Oscar's mother is determined to get rid of Ivy. Oscar's famous neighbour is determined to paint her. Carroty Kate is determined to find her, and Ivy herself is determined to escape . . .

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Excerpt provided by Syndetics

Ï>>¿ Chapter One In Which Ivy Is Treated Rather Badly by Philanthropists in Ridiculous Dresses Mrs. Hortense Merryfield and Mrs. Christiana Larrington of the Ragged Children's Welfare Association (South London branch) chose a bitterly cold spring morning upon which to patronize the deserving poor of Lambeth. Picking their way along filthy streets, the hems of their crinolines blotting up slush and the beads on their bon- nets tinkling like ice, they were so obviously out of their element that by the time they reached the corner of New Cut, a sizable crowd of ragged children was on their tail, hopping and flapping and begging for coppers. "Jus' a ha'penny, missus. Jus' enough for a hot tater." "It's for me bruvver, missus. Me little bruvver wot's sick." "Shoo!" cried Mrs. Merryfield. "Scram!" And she waved her umbrella and stood her ground until all but one of the little imps had given up the clamor and scattered. Mrs. Larrington, who was younger than her companion, drew a mohair shawl tighter 'round her shoulders and tried not to seem afraid. This was her first time out among the deserving poor and she was beginning to wish she had stayed in Norwood, among snowdrops and servants and the undeserving rich. Where had they come from, all those ragamuffins? So pale, so dirty, and so clearly half-frozen that they might have sprung fully formed from the slush. Yet they'd had the strength, all of them, to run like bunnikins from the point of Mrs. Merryfield's umbrella. Even the girls had scarpered. It was the sight of those scarpering girls, Mrs. Larrington realized, that had disturbed her the most. For she herself had never run anywhere. Not even as a child. It wasn't ladylike; it wasn't natural for the female of the species to move so fast. She was about to say as much to dear Mrs. Merryfield when she felt a tugging at her sleeve. "Ugh!" She shuddered, shrinking away. "Don't touch me, you...you insolent creature." "I live €‰'ere, if you please," piped a voice at her elbow. "Only, your dress is blockin' the way." Looking down over the slope of her crinoline, Mrs. Larrington found her gaze being met by a little scrap of indeterminate age. This, readers, was Ivy, the heroine of our story, but all Mrs. Larrington saw was a small girl with huge hazel eyes and a veritable halo of tangled hair. It was a cross between a nest and a cloud, that hair, and such an extraordinary color that Mrs. Larrington's gloved hand moved instinctively to stroke it. "Stop! My dear Mrs. Larrington. What can you be thinking of? There will be more lice on this child than you'll find crumbs in a biscuit barrel. First rule of home visits€‰ -- €‰keep your distance." And with a prod and a twist, the redoubtable Mrs. Merryfield hooked the crook of her umbrella under the ragged girl's collar and yanked her up and away. "Oh my," declared Mrs. Larrington as the child rose into the air, flailing like a raggedy fish. "Oh my goodness me." But the child said not a word, only struggled and gulped while her face turned very pink beneath several layers of dirt and her extraordinary hair whipped around her head in a flurry of tangles and tendrils. Now, had Mrs. Merryfield's umbrella been a dainty contraption of ruched silk and spindled ivory, it would have snapped for sure. But this umbrella was like its owner€‰ -- €‰sturdy. Its point had seen off pickpockets, bull terriers, and many a drunken sailor. And its hard wooden handle, carved to resemble a bird with its beak open, was more than equal to bearing€‰ -- €‰temporarily, anyway€‰ -- €‰the weight of a skinny, underfed little girl. "Oh my," Mrs. Larrington repeated as her companion swung the child expertly across the cobbles and landed her with a barely audible thwunk into a puddle of muck and melting snow. "Oh my goodness me." "There!" Mrs. Merryfield unhooked the umbrella. "That's more like it." And from somewhere about her person she whipped a rag, one of the many squares of calico she carried for the specific purpose of wiping whichever bit of her umbrella had been used to prod, poke, or occasionally lift the undeserving poor to a distance where neither their lice nor their thieving fingers could threaten her own person. The little girl seemed too stunned to move. Her bottom would have been turning as wet and cold as a polar bear's, yet she remained in the muddy puddle, staring up in hurt astonishment at the one who had dumped her there. Mrs. Larrington dithered. Mrs. Merryfield carried on wiping. All around the handle she went, pressing the rag into every dip and dent of the carved bird and taking particular care with the open beak in case it contained a microscopic helping of lice. "Oi! What's goin' on? Git up offer them wet cobbles. And oo said you could wear me jacket? Me snazziest jacket wot I bartered me ticker an' chain for down Petticoat Lane and ain't worn meself no more than once, an' that only to check the fit of it." Mrs. Larrington gave such a start that she almost snapped something in her corset. Mrs. Merryfield (who never bothered with corsets, preferring ease of movement, particularly in Lambeth) turned and raised her umbrella. "Young man," she scolded, "I must ask you to mind your manners. Such bellowing and agitation is exceedingly rude and quite€‰ -- €‰" "Git up, I said. And if me jacket's spoiled, you'll get an €‰'iding you won't forget in a month of Sundays, strike me if you won't." And before Mrs. Larrington could unflutter her nerves or Mrs. Merryfield do any more bashing, prodding, or hooking, a ragged boy darted across the cobbles, grabbed the child in the puddle, and whisked her back onto her feet. "Give it €‰'ere." The jacket in question was a soiled but still gaudy blue with brass buttons the size of jam lids down the front. On the child it looked more like an oversized coat. Miserably she shrugged it off and handed it over. Underneath she wore a cotton dress with a pattern of roses faded to smudges. It was tissue-thin, that dress, and she shivered silently in it and swayed a little, her feet still planted in the puddle. The boy was holding the jacket aloft, inspecting it carefully. He himself wore dark cord trousers, goodish boots, and a plush velvet cap. His waistcoat had two mother-of-pearl buttons left on it, and he had arranged a scarlet neckerchief to cover the place where the topmost buttons were missing. Skinny and grubby though he was, he was clearly a bit of a dandy. "A rip!" he hollered. "A big rip under me collar! Right€‰ -- €‰now you're for it." Mrs. Larrington and Mrs. Merryfield exchanged quick glances. A rip, big or small, was not something they were going to be blamed for, or taken to task over, by a grubby little urchin. Lifting one hand Jared made a lunge for the child. Quick as a cat she ran all the way 'round Mrs. Larrington's crinoline and disappeared down an alleyway. The boy tried to follow. Thwack! "Not so fast, young man." Mrs. Merryfield's right arm and the length of her furled umbrella blocked the entrance to the alleyway as effectively as any three-barred gate. "What's your name?" she demanded. The boy gaped at the umbrella and then up at Mrs. Merryfield as if he couldn't quite believe they were in his way. Mrs. Merryfield regarded him ferociously until he backed down and averted his own scowl. A charity monger. That's what she was. Uglier than a butcher's dog and with a snarl to match, but a do-gooder nonetheless. He had no time for do-gooders. No time at all. But they could be soft touches, if you played your cards right€‰ -- €‰he knew that much. "Your name!?" Mrs. Merryfield demanded again. The boy appeared to hesitate. Then: "Jared," he replied, doffing his cap and flashing her a sudden grin. "Jared Roderick Montague Jackson at your service, ma'am." Mrs. Merryfield's expression remained flinty. "Ma'am," he repeated, swiveling to bow to the other lady, who, he noticed at once, looked like a much softer touch. Mrs. Larrington risked a nervous smile. What a long name, she thought, for a pauper. "Well then, Jared Roderick Montague Jackson," said Mrs. Merryfield, lowering her umbrella. "And you are what€‰ -- €‰nine, ten years of age?" The boy puffed out his chest in its partially buttoned waistcoat. "I turned twelve on Christmas Day, ma'am," he said. "Not that there was much rejoicin' of it. No, nor of our dear Savior's birth, neither. Not with my dear mama an invalid and my papa so sorely reduced in circumstances that there ain't a moment goes by when we ain't all workin' and contrivin' as best we can to pay the rent an' put bread on the table." Mrs. Larrington's mouth twitched. The boy had pronounced the word "in-val-id" as in "completely without merit" when he had surely meant "in-vuh-lid" as in "a person suffering from chronic ill health." How on earth, she wondered, had he arrived at such an error? Jared didn't notice, or chose to ignore, her amusement. "Not that we €‰'as a table no more, ma'am," he continued. "For it went for firewood a fortnight since when it were freezin' so bad the little uns turned blue an' we €‰'ad no money for coal." Then he gave a huge sigh and held his jacket to his cheek. "An' now me jacket's torn," he moaned. "Me best jacket wot I'd intended on sellin' to pay for a bit o' fuel. Me brand-new jacket wot I'd sooner barter to keep the little €‰'uns warm than wear on me back for so much as a minute. All torn under the collar it is now, an' good for nothin' but the ragman." With a sorrowful shake of the head he folded the jacket beneath his armpit and patted it once, twice, three times as if it had hurt feelings or a pain in its sleeves. Then he scowled toward the alleyway and shook his fist. "An' there's one oo's still to cop a good thrashin' for rippin' it. So excuse me, ladies...." "Oh dear," said Mrs. Larrington. "I rather think...there might have been..." "Halt!" Mrs. Merryfield slapped her umbrella back across the entrance to the alleyway. Her other hand she held up at Mrs. Larrington for silence. "...some mistake," Mrs. Larrington finished weakly. Jared paused obediently. "Young man," said Mrs. Merryfield, "it sounds to me as if your family might€‰ -- €‰and I stress the word 'might'€‰ -- €‰benefit from an assessment of its current situation." "It would benny-fit from the price of a sheep's €‰'ead or a bit o' bacon for the pot," the boy declared solemnly. "And from summat a bit warmer than tater sacks to wrap the babby in." "Well then," said Mrs. Merryfield, her smile only a little sweeter than vinegar, "perhaps Mrs. Larrington and I should acquaint ourselves with your entire clan. I suggest you lead the way." Copyright (c) 2008 by Julie Hearn Excerpted from Ivy by Julie Hearn 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

Capturing her audience with her first sentences, Hearn (Sign of the Raven) paints an almost lush picture of a seamy 19th-century London as she describes two ladies from the "Ragged Children's Welfare Association" who "pick their way along filthy streets, the hems of their crinolines blotting up slush and the beads of their bonnets tinkling like ice." (It's not surprising to learn that Philip Pullman was a mentor.) Among the ladies' intended beneficiaries will be the orphan Ivy, a Pre-Raphaelite beauty--although she spends the bulk of the novel groggy on laudanum, an addiction she picks up very young. Ivy is practically passed around, half asleep, as more of a set piece about which other characters can frolic, scheme and swoon. Fortunately, there's plenty of spunk to go around on Ivy's behalf--from the good-hearted con artist Carroty Kate, who takes the child Ivy in, to the bumbling, aspiring artist Oscar Frosdick, for whom Ivy models, despite the efforts of his conniving mother to keep her away. A fast and absorbing read. Ages 12-up. (June) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

School Library Journal Review

Gr 9 Up-In true Dickensian manner, this atmospheric, richly detailed story takes readers from the slums to the upper-class locales of mid-1800s London. Ivy is a victim throughout much of the book, trying to escape villains who seek her demise. Orphaned and living with uncaring relatives, she runs away at the age of five, after bad experiences during her first day at school. Lost, she is lured by Carroty Kate into a gang of thieves, where she becomes addicted to laudanum. Ten years later, Ivy is back with her family, who profit from her work as a model for a pre-Raphaelite artist with an evil, jealous mother. In a fog of addiction, Ivy lives at the mercy of her circumstances until she is finally able to take charge of her future. Quirky characters, darkly humorous situations, and quick action make this enjoyable historical fiction. An afterword about Dante Gabriel Rossetti and his wife Lizzie Siddal as the inspiration for this novel is included.-Denise Moore, O'Gorman Junior High School, Sioux Falls, SD (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Booklist Review

Hearn (The Minister's Daughter, 2005) pulls off an intriguing, Dickensian tale that combines authentic nineteenth-century period detail with well-developed, credible characters and an out-of-the-ordinary setting the Pre-Raphaelite art world. London slum-dweller Ivy was kidnapped at five, on her first and only day of school, by a small band of gentle thieves. She returned home a few years later, a laudanum addict. At 15, she's roused from her typical drugged state in order to earn money as a painter's model, at which point the adventure goes full throttle: the painter's mother is jealous enough to try both poison and imprisonment to do away with Ivy; the painter himself is so self-centered that he only notices Ivy's physical strikingness, not any of her social or emotional needs. Eventually, Ivy eschews her laudanum in order to take control of her life, which, in spite of a bad beginning proceeds promisingly with some help from the thieves introduced earlier. Fans of Eleanor Updale's books will immediately take to this tale of Victorian trials, tribulations, and scamps.--Goldsmith, Francisca Copyright 2008 Booklist

Horn Book Review

(Middle School, High School) With its nineteenth-century London setting, orphans, invalids, thieves with names like "the Muck Snipe," and memorably descriptive chapter headings, Ivy may lead readers to expect a standard variation on the Dickensian model. But Hearn (The Minister's Daughter, rev. 9/05) transcends expectations with a refreshingly original novel that is both a kind of homage to Dante Gabriel Rossetti's wife/muse, Lizzie Siddal, and a send-up of the Victorian art world. At age five, slum denizen Ivy Jackson, notable for her dogged vegetarianism and long red curls, finds herself the shill of a skinner -- "a woman who literally stole the clothes off a person's back" -- the nevertheless motherly Carroty Kate. When we next meet Ivy, she's fifteen, back with her family (having run away years before during a botched job for which she believes her beloved Kate hanged), and chronically addicted to laudanum. She is also -- according to Oscar Frosdick, the foppish artist who hires Ivy as his model -- a "stunner." The bobbing-and-weaving storytelling that ensues includes a plot by Oscar's jealous mother to dispatch Ivy (by, among other things, strychnine poisoning and python squeezing) and an unexpected and revelatory reunion with Carroty Kate. There is much earthy humor -- often rather dark -- in both situation and language. Hearn creates vivid settings and characters and keeps readers engrossed as they journey with Ivy from passive, doped-up sleepwalker to young woman with a happy, self-selected future. From HORN BOOK, (c) Copyright 2010. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Kirkus Book Review

Ivy's wild red hair and porcelain skin get her daily work as a painter's model, far from Victorian London's slums, but she can't escape a debilitating addiction to the popular drug laudanum. This entertaining Dickensian yarn introduces teen readers to sooty streets, scheming dodgers, ripe Cockney accents and 19th-century class struggles. The clear narrative voice remains agile throughout, nimbly documenting Ivy's pitiful orphan existence in scenes both humorous and horrific. Readers will find themselves rooting for Ivy to take control as she sinks into numb, drug-induced stupors and allows herself to be continually exploited by bullying relatives, a pompous painter and his authentically evil mother. Hearn infuses Ivy with quiet luminosity and a feisty inner voice that convince readers she might fight to claim her own happiness. Teens will find such contemporary issues as addiction, animal cruelty and vegetarianism nestled comfortably within this clever work of historical fiction. Intricate, engaging language and quirky characters paint a vivid picture of the Victorian era. (Fiction. 14 & up) Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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