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Teen Fiction - Entertainment & Arts, Teen Fiction - Mysteries & Thrillers, Teen Fiction - Romance & Friendship
Catherine by April Lindner — book cover

Catherine

by April Lindner
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Overview

A forbidden romance. A modern mystery. Wuthering Heights as you've never seen it before.

Catherine is tired of struggling musicians befriending her just so they can get a gig at her Dad's famous Manhattan club, The Underground. Then she meets mysterious Hence, an unbelievably passionate and talented musician on the brink of success. As their relationship grows, both are swept away in a fiery romance. But when their love is tested by a cruel whim of fate, will pride keep them apart?
Chelsea has always believed that her mom died of a sudden illness, until she finds a letter her dad has kept from her for years — a letter from her mom, Catherine, who didn't die: She disappeared. Driven by unanswered questions, Chelsea sets out to look for her — starting with the return address on the letter: The Underground.

Told in two voices, twenty years apart, Catherine interweaves a timeless forbidden romance with a compelling modern mystery.

About the Author, April Lindner

April Lindner delivers a fresh retelling of the Emily Brontë classic Wuthering Heights in Catherine. She is also the author of Jane and a professor of English at Saint Joseph's University in Philadelphia. April lives with her husband and two sons in Pennsylvania.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

Digging through old boxes one bored day in the ’burbs, 17-year-old Chelsea discovers that the mother she thought was dead actually disappeared when Chelsea was three. Immediately, Chelsea hops a bus to New York City and starts looking for more information. Told in two voices 20 years apart—those of Chelsea in the present and her mother, Catherine, when she was herself 17—the book updates Wuthering Heights with a downtown New York City rock club (think CBGB) standing in for the Yorkshire moors. Lindner, whose Jane was a modernized retelling of Jane Eyre, capably streamlines the complex, gothic plot twists of the original as she depicts the passionate but ill-fated love between Catherine and Heathcliff stand-in Hence, a rock ragamuffin taken in by Catherine’s club owner father. Unfortunately, Chelsea is fairly generic, and her romance with another young rocker (Hence’s protégé and heir) comes across as plot-driven, not organic. The climax at the gun-stocked home of Catherine’s angry brother, though clearly meant as a cleansing explosion of love and violence worthy of Emily Brontë, is melodramatic and abrupt. Ages 15–up. Agent: Amy Williams, McCormick & Williams Literary Agency. (Jan.)

Booklist

"Dramatic events touched by love, loss, and longing have all the juicy elements readers will appreciate...[Catherine] captures the agony of love gone wrong.

Library Media Connection

* Intricately written, this fast-paced story...will enthrall readers. Give this book to readers of Sarah Dessen, Stephanie Perkins, and Simone Elkeles.

Kirkus Reviews

After discovering that her mother, Catherine Eversole Price, had not died, as her father told her, but instead deserted the family and then disappeared, 17-year-old Chelsea Price goes on a quest to find out what happened to her. The narrative, a loose-limbed take on Wuthering Heights, is told in the alternating, first-person voices of daughter and mother. However, the emotional heart of the story belongs to Catherine, who as a senior in high school, was a young woman torn between an all-encompassing love for musician Hence and a desire to pursue her own ambitions. The story is set in motion when Chelsea unearths a 14-year-old letter from her mother. The return address leads her to Manhattan's Lower East Side and a legendary rock club called The Underground. There she meets the adult Hence, now the club's owner. Hence is a furious exposed nerve of a man, but surprisingly, he shows, if not a soft spot, then at least a less-hard one toward Chelsea, who greatly resembles her mother. The strands of mother's and daughter's stories come together during the suspenseful climax, when Chelsea discovers what actually happened to Catherine and gains a measure of peace and maturity. Not as emotionally engaging as readers might desire, but solid and well-told. (Fiction. 15 & up)

School Library Journal

Gr 9 Up—As she did in Jane (Little, Brown, 2010), Linder updates another gothic romance, this time Wuthering Heights. Catherine, the daughter of a punk rock club owner in Manhattan, is true rock music royalty. Her teenage daughter, Chelsea, has grown up in small-town Massachusetts thinking her mother died when Chelsea was three. She discovers that Catherine actually left her and her father to go back to New York City, so Chelsea sets off to see if the woman is still alive. Lindner alternates between Catherine's and Chelsea's narration. Catherine's tale (told when she herself is a teen) moves at a quicker pace and is all sweeping emotion and histrionics about how she fell in love fast and hard with Hence, a rising rock star who worked at her dad's club, The Underground. Chelsea's story (which takes place 20 years later) is more measured as she seeks to unravel the mystery of her mother's past. The sense of time is a bit skewed, but teens will no doubt forgive these blemishes as they are caught up in the drama of true love never dying. Catherine and her husband tend toward stereotypes (the perfect woman, the milquetoast professor), but Chelsea and Hence, whom Chelsea meets when she goes to The Underground looking for clues about her mother, both learn and grow as the tale is told. Catherine is as tragic, emo, and over-the-top as the novel that inspired it. Romance fans will eat it up.—Geri Diorio, Ridgefield Library, CT

Book Details

Published
January 1, 2013
Publisher
Little, Brown Books for Young Readers
Pages
320
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780316196925

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