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Princess of the Midnight Ball
First edition cover
AuthorJessica Day George
Cover artistLarry Rostant, Donna Mark
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreFantasy
PublisherBloomsbury
Publication date
2009
Published in English
2009
Pages272
ISBN1-59990-322-9
Followed byPrincess of Glass 

Princess of the Midnight Ball is a 2009 young adult fantasy novel written by Jessica Day George. It is based on the fairy tale "The Twelve Dancing Princesses".

Plot summary

Princess Rose and her sisters Lily, Jonquil, Hyacinth, Violet, Daisy, Poppy, Iris, Lilac, Orchid, Pansy, and Petunia are trapped in a curse. Every third night, they have to dance at the Midnight Ball with the twelve sons of the King Under Stone, who lives in a realm below the earth. The curse prevents them from speaking of it, and every prince who attempts to learn their secret in hopes of marrying one of them and inheriting the crown ends up dead by the next full moon.

Galen Werner is a soldier who is returning from the Westfalin-Analousia war. On his way to the city of Bruch to live with his mother's sister Liesel Orm, Galen meets an old woman. After he shares his food with her, the woman gives him white and black yarn and an invisibility cloak, saying that he would have to use them when "He" tries to get to the surface.

When Galen meets Rose, she knows that he can try to break the curse, but will he succeed despite the complications they come across, maybe they will...

Characters

  • Jonquil, the third eldest princess, well-known for her good looks and her tendency to dress ostentatiously. She shares a room with Lily and Rose; the three eldest princesses are known as the "Older Set." She is 16. By the events of Princess of the Silver Woods, she remains unmarried as recurring nightmares of her experience at the Midnight Balls have marred her beauty and discouraged her suitors.
  • Hyacinth, the fourth eldest princess, known to be extremely pious and prays often, but is also said to be graceful and an exquisite dancer. She shares a room with Violet and the twins. She is 15. In the years after the Midnight Balls, Hyacinth becomes considerably more forceful towards the King Under Stone's successors. In Princess of the Silver Woods, she has married Jacques, an Analousian aristocrat.
  • Violet, the fifth eldest, is musically inclined. She loves to play the pianoforte and is a fine singer, but is also good at cards. She is 14. In Princess of the Silver Woods, it is revealed that she has married the son of the Archduke von Schwabian, Prince Frederick, who shares Violet's musical inclinations.
  • Poppy and Daisy, twin sisters, the sixth (Poppy) and seventh (Daisy) eldest in their family. Poppy is tough and outspoken and an excellent cardsharp, while Daisy is easily frightened and well-behaved. The twins are 13 during the novel. Poppy is the heroine of the sequel, Princess of Glass, where she develops a relationship with Prince Christian of the Danelaw during their stay in Breton, whom she marries at the conclusion of Princess of the Silver Woods. Daisy eventually marries Prince Ricard of Venenzia.
  • Iris, the eighth princess, known to be kindhearted. She is 12.
  • Lilac, the ninth princess, who enjoys watching plays. She is 11.
  • Orchid, the tenth princess, who also enjoys watching plays and is rather studious. She and Iris are often mistaken for one another, even though Orchid distinctly wears spectacles. She forms the "Youngest Set" with her sisters Pansy and Petunia. She is 10.
  • Pansy, the second youngest princess, a delicate girl who hates dancing to the point of hysteria and Rose fears that Pansy may lose her sanity over time if they are forced to continue. Her favorite sister is Lily. She is 7.
  • Petunia, the youngest princess who still loves to dance, not fully understanding the implications of the curse of the King Under Stone. She is described as being very short in her adolescence, which strengthens her resemblance to her mother, Queen Maude. Petunia is the heroine of the series' third book, Princess of the Silver Woods. We have to assume that she is over the age of twelve because in “Princess of the Silver Woods” she says that the gardener wouldn’t forgive her for something that happened over eight years ago, and she was sent away when she was eleven to stay in Russaka. It also says that she was given a necklace from her father for her sixteenth birthday, and Oliver, the earl and love interest in book 3, is 17, so we can assume she is 16, because 10 years have past since the first book. In the first book, Petunia was 6.

See also

References

  1. ^ Princess of the Silver Woods, Chapter 2 - "Kidnapped"