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Cold Kiss

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

It was a beautiful, warm summer day, the day Danny died.

Suddenly Wren was alone and shattered. In a heartbroken fury, armed with dark incantations and a secret power, Wren decides that what she wants—what she must do—is to bring Danny back.

But the Danny who returns is just a shell of the boy Wren fell in love with. His touch is icy; his skin, smooth and stiff as marble; his chest, cruelly silent when Wren rests her head against it.

Wren must keep Danny a secret, hiding him away, visiting him at night, while her life slowly unravels around her. Then Gabriel DeMarnes transfers to her school, and Wren realizes that somehow, inexplicably, he can sense the powers that lie within her—and that he knows what she has done. And now Gabriel wants to help make things right.

But Wren alone has to undo what she has wrought—even if it means breaking her heart all over again.

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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 11, 2011
      Adult romance writer Garvey makes her YA debut with an introspective paranormal story about holding on when one should let go. Seventeen-year-old Wren has inherited her family's ability to tap into the energy of the world to make magical things happen. She's never been one to think things through, but has outdone herself by raising her boyfriend from the dead after he is killed in a drunk-driving accident. As Wren becomes less certain about how to deal with what she's done, the reanimated Danny (who isn't exactly the boyfriend she remembers) is recovering his memories and becoming more difficult to control. Wren is thrown even further off-balance when new student Gabriel, who has supernatural abilities of his own, uncovers her secret. After more lies tumble together and escalate, Wren confronts her attraction to Gabriel, the reality of her inadvertent cruelty, and her failing relationships with friends and family. Garvey sidesteps zombie tropes by keeping the focus on Wren's emotional state and the consequences of her actions, painting a delicate portrait of first love, loss, and a "girl who thought love came with ownership papers." Ages 13âup.

    • School Library Journal

      November 1, 2011

      Gr 9 Up-When her boyfriend dies in a car accident, Wren is so inconsolable that she uses her budding supernatural gifts to raise Danny from the dead. He waits patiently for her nightly visits to their little nest in the loft above her neighbor's garage, and she endures his cold kiss. Wren slowly realizes that she made a mistake, and that the boy she loved is gone though his reanimated body remains. Then Gabriel arrives at school, and he seems to know more about Wren's mysterious powers than she does. She feels an undeniable attraction to Gabriel, who can see into her mind, where he discovers what she's done. Danny, meanwhile, grows restless as he remembers more about the night he died, and he escapes from the garage to find answers. Suddenly, he's more than a gruesome secret-he's a danger to Wren and Gabriel. Because he is already undead at the beginning of the book, and the courtship is relayed through Wren's memories, readers miss out on many of the qualities that made the prickly teen fall so hard for Danny, and the narrative lacks emotional intensity. Nonetheless, this novel succeeds on many levels, especially as a cautionary tale about the all-consuming power of first love and the need to move on after it ends.-Amy Pickett, Ridley High School, Folsom, PA

      Copyright 2011 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      April 15, 2011

      To what lengths is it acceptable to go to hold on to someone you love?

      Devastated by the premature death of her boyfriend, Wren enlists her natural magical abilities to bring him back--although even Wren has to admit that the Danny she has brought back is only a shadow of what he was in life. Desperate to keep what she has done a secret, Wren is forced to live a double life. She must keep one foot firmly planted in teenage reality: attending classes, dealing with friends and ducking her mother's questions. Her other foot is planted in her secret, as she struggles to keep a boy who is more her puppet than her former boyfriend hidden. Her plans are slowly unraveling when she meets Gabriel, a new boy who can read her thoughts and guesses her dark secret. As Danny becomes more difficult for Wren to handle, she begins to see that not only is he not the boy she once knew, but he might actually be dangerous. In the end, it is Danny's own words that help Wren the most. Fast-paced and achingly real, this fresh tale hints at the danger that lurks beneath Wren's spell without veering into the macabre. Driven by her selfish desires both to keep Danny and then to be rid of him, Wren is not a traditional heroine, but her character is ultimately redeemed by her decision to make things right no matter the cost.

      A provocative romance rises above zombie conventions. (Fiction. 14 & up)

      (COPYRIGHT (2011) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

    • The Horn Book

      January 1, 2012
      Wren and Danny are meant to be together forever -- and then Danny dies in a car accident. Wren responds to the universal experience of grief in a singular way: the women in her family manifest magical powers when they reach puberty, and Wren uses hers to bring Danny back from the dead. But the Danny who returns is a shadow of the boy she loved, with only fading memories of his previous life, no real will of his own, and a disturbing dependency on Wren. Just as her already-tenuous grasp on the situation grows even more precarious, Wren meets Gabriel, who's drawn by her gift -- "the one thing [she'd] kept secret" from Danny. Wren begins, hesitantly, to believe she can make things right. Though romance takes center stage, Garvey weaves female familial relationships as intricately as Wren creates her spell. The taboo topic of magic is a point of both connection and contention across several generations. Wren's resentment toward the taboo, which keeps her ignorant about her powers, and her protectiveness of younger sister Robin (beginning to access her own abilities) are especially poignant. Garvey could easily have told a cautionary tale about being careful what you wish for; instead, this a story of the redemption possible in taking responsibility for mistakes and the comfort found in sharing burdens. katie bircher

      (Copyright 2012 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • The Horn Book

      January 1, 2012
      The women in Wren's family manifest magical powers when they reach puberty. Wren uses hers to bring her boyfriend back from the dead, but the Danny who returns is a shadow of the boy she loved. Then Wren meets Gabriel, who's drawn by her gift. Though romance takes center stage, Garvey weaves female familial relationships as intricately as Wren creates her spell.

      (Copyright 2012 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

Formats

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Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:5.5
  • Interest Level:9-12(UG)
  • Text Difficulty:4

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