While I’ve encountered plenty of novels about the re-written or reinterpreted doings of famous literary characters, I’ve never before read one where the world was set up quite as creatively as this one. Without its influence, the characters are free to leave the Theatre, and one handsome and cunning player (and close friend) wants to escape at any cost, even if it means sending the Theatre into chaos…Įyes Like Stars by Lisa Mantchev is a unique book. Further complicating her problem is a plot surrounding The Complete Works of the Stage, otherwise known as The Book, a magical tome containing every play ever written, and the force that holds the Theatre Illuminata together. She decides, then, to give herself a purpose by restaging Shakespeare’s famous Hamlet, setting it in Egypt rather than Denmark. Bertie was a foundling, with no written purpose, and for her, leaving the Theatre means leaving the only home she’s ever known. Everyone else has a defined purpose-They are all characters in famous plays, and without them at the Theatre, the plays cannot be enacted. Bertie isn’t like other members of the Theatre Illuminata. She’s always been notorious for the mischief she creates around the Theatre Illuminata, but after an incident involving a cannon, the destruction of several set pieces, and a spectacular fire, she finds herself stuck with two options-make herself useful, or leave the Theatre forever. Beatrice Shakespeare Smith is in trouble.
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