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Skulduggery Pleasant by Derek Landy
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Skulduggery Pleasant

by Derek Landy

Series: Skulduggery Pleasant (1)

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665506,923 (4.02)37
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The Bowen Press (2007), Hardcover

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English (48)  German (2)  All languages (50)
Showing 1-5 of 48 (next | show all)
Children's Novel (Series/Standalone):
When Stephanie Edgley first meets Skulduggery Pleasant, a walking, talking skeleton sorcerer, she is inadvertently swept up into a world of magic, secrets and mystery. She and Skulduggery try to stay ahead of many attacks by the evil Serpine and other malicious characters, all the while staying wonderfully funny and sarcastic.

I picked up this one on audiobook, and was very pleased with the narrative quality. Skulduggery’s voice was especially perfect (he is a walking, talking skeleton, after all). I’d highly recommend this to fans of Harry Potter, and the Artemis Fowl series. The plot was fun and enjoyable, but what I loved most about it was how funny it was. I laughed out loud on many occasions. The next two in the series are “Skulduggery Pleasant: Playing with Fire” and Skulduggery Pleasant: the Faceless Ones” Both are just as enjoyable as the first, while stepping up the action, further developing the overall plot, and introducing various new characters.

Skulduggery Pleasant made it onto YALSA’s Best Books for Young Adults 2008, and Oprah’s Kid’s Reading Lists for New Releases- ages 12 and up. (Oprah’s Kid’s Reading Lists are compiled with the assistance of the American Library Association.) ( )
  lbignell | Dec 6, 2009 |
xcellent ( )
  chicjohn | Dec 3, 2009 |
Fun packed action / adventure book, when Skulduggery Pleasant, the snappy dressing skellington detective first enters into Stephanie's life, things will never be the same. Lots of one liners and sarcasm fill this book in between the fast paced action. Some of the characterisation for me was a little out, with the two main characters feeling too similar, and some of the baddies weren't as scary as they could have been - that aside though, this was a fun book to read, and for its target audience its probably near perfect! ( )
  princessponti | Oct 19, 2009 |
Reviewed by Carrie Spellman for TeensReadToo.com

It all started when Gordon Edgley died. Well, it actually started much earlier than that. I mean, if you want to be picky it "all" started at the dawn of time. Or is that just when time started? Never mind. The point is, for Stephanie Edgley it all started when her uncle Gordon died. Gordon wasn't much of a family man; in fact, Stephanie was probably the one closest to him. Even saying that, though, is a bit of a stretch. It would probably be better to say that he tolerated her presence better and more often than he did the rest of his family. Which still doesn't completely explain why he left his house, his fortune, and his book royalties to her. Actually, there's a lot of unexplained things about Gordon, even more so now that he's gone. Like the strange man at the funeral. The one wrapped so tightly in a scarf, sunglasses, and an overcoat that you can't even glimpse an inch of his skin. That was the first time Stephanie had ever encountered Skulduggery Pleasant.

The next time they were in the same room was for the reading of Gordon's will. The one where he left most of his things to his twelve-year-old niece. Much to the dismay of Stephanie's aunt and uncle, who got a boat (Uncle Fergus gets seasick), a car ("We already have a car!"), and a brooch ("It doesn't even have any jewels on it."). Stephanie's parents, incidentally, got the villa in France. Skulduggery Pleasant received the strangest gift of all, which is some very cryptic advice. With which he was completely content. This was not to be the last encounter between Stephanie and Skulduggery.

Having spent most of a day exploring part of Stephanie's new house, she and her mother get in the car to go home and find that the car won't start. The mechanic that comes to fix it has to tow it back to his shop. Stephanie convinces her mother that she can stay at the house alone while the car is being fixed. But, the storm that started while they were waiting for the mechanic grows worse as time passes. It is eventually determined that the car won't be fixed until tomorrow, and the road to the house is flooded. Stephanie is stuck for the night. Though it takes some convincing for her mom to leave her there.

Freedom and solitude: Stephanie couldn't be happier! Which lasts all of a few minutes. Someone is trying to break into the house, and somehow Stephanie doesn't believe him when he says he won't hurt her if she just lets him in to get what he wants. Skulduggery Pleasant to the rescue! And what a strange rescuer he is. In the struggle with the intruder, Skulduggery's hat and scarf fall off to reveal only a skeleton! Stephanie is so shocked by this that she mostly forgets what he's done. Now she has a million questions: Who and what is Skulduggery? How did he know her uncle? Why was he at the house? How is it that he can throw fire? Can he teach her? And how does he stay upright when there's no skin and muscle to hold him together?

Stephanie is stunned, but oddly not frightened, by recent events. She was just contemplating how boring life was, and suddenly life got considerably more thrilling! Skulduggery isn't in the market for a sidekick, but he might just have gotten one. After one night in his world (he did have to keep her safe after all) Stephanie can't imagine pretending not to know what she knows. Besides, the bad guys are after her. Or at least something that belonged to her uncle, and now that she owns most of his things... Life, or death depending on who you are, will never be the same.

I love it! Not just a fun storyline, an exciting adventure, and a well drawn plot, although it does contain all of these things. SKULDUGGERY PLEASANT is one of the best written books I have encountered recently. Conversational and snappy, witty and self-deprecating, with a fantastically quirky cast of characters. This one has enough adventure to keep you on the edge of your seat, and random hilarity that makes falling off that seat a distinct possibility! I can hardly do it justice by merely describing it, so you'll just have to read it, and love it. ( )
1 vote GeniusJen | Oct 13, 2009 |
Scepter of the Ancients immediately grabbed my attention with all the lightning coming out of the jeweled scepter on the front cover. Within the first two paragraphs, I became intrigued by the death of Stephanie’s uncle and an unidentifiable man at his funeral. The story quickly unfolded when Stephanie spends the night at the mansion her uncle leaves her in his will. She is attacked for a key she knows nothing about, but is rescued by the mysterious man who turns out to be a rather humorous talking skeleton, named Skulduggery Pleasant. He is a close friend of Stephanie’s uncle and is also a detective who reveals a magical world that Stephanie can’t turn away from. Positive that the man who attacked her has something to do with her uncle’s death, Stephanie teams up with Skulduggery Pleasant to seek out the Scepter of the Ancients, which is known only as a legend. As they pick up more clues about where the scepter is, Stephanie meets new characters who join them to help solve the mystery. They do not find the scepter in time, but they do stop the evil Serpine from gaining total control over the world. I enjoyed this aspect because the book did not end exactly the way I thought it would. The imagery that Derek Landry used in this novel is amazing and it helped make every chapter come alive. The combined mystery and humor made this book enjoyable to read and I would recommend it to anyone who likes adventurous novels with a twist. This book has won the Young Reader’s Choice Award, the Red House Children’s Book Award, the ALA Best Books for Young Adults and was a finalist for the Cybils Award. ( )
1 vote Racheguevara | Oct 4, 2009 |
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Epigraph
Dedication
This book is dedicated to my parents, John and Barbara.
Dad - this is for your bizarrely unwavering support and unflinching faith.
Barbs - this is for that look on your face when I told you the good news.
I owe you absolutely everything, and y'know, I suppose it's entirely possible that I feel some, like, degree of affection toward the two of you...
First words
Gordon Edgley's sudden death came as a shock to everyone -- not least himself.
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Disambiguation notice
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Wikipedia in English (2)

Skulduggery Pleasant

Wikipedia:Reference desk/Archives/Humanities/2009 June 15

Book description

Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0061231150, Hardcover)

Meet Skulduggery Pleasant

Ace Detective
Snappy Dresser
Razor–tongued Wit
Crackerjack Sorcerer
and
Walking, Talking,
Fire-throwing Skeleton

—as well as ally, protector, and mentor of Stephanie Edgley, a very unusual and darkly talented twelve-year-old.

These two alone must defeat an all-consuming ancient evil.

The end of the world?

Over his dead body.

(retrieved from Amazon Tue, 05 Jan 2010 11:59:41 -0500)

(see all 3 descriptions)

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