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Overview
Heaven-sent?
Ellie was never particularly good at talking to boys—oranyone other than her best friend and fellow outcast, Ruth.Then she met Michael.
Michael is handsome, charming, sweet. And totallyinto Ellie. It’s no wonder she is instantly drawn to him.But Michael has a secret. And he knows Ellie is hidingsomething, too. They’ve both discovered they have powersbeyond their imagining. Powers that are otherworldly.
Ellie and Michael are determined to uncover what theyare, and how they got this way . . . together. But the truth hasrepercussions neither could have imagined. Soon they findthemselves center stage in an ancient conflict that threatensto destroy everything they love. And it is no longer clearwhether Ellie and Michael will choose the same side.
In this electrifying novel, Heather Terrell spins agripping supernatural tale about true love, destiny, and thebattle of good versus evil.
Synopsis
Heaven-sent?
Ellie was never particularly good at talking to boys—or anyone other than her best friend and fellow outcast, Ruth. Then she met Michael.
Michael is handsome, charming, sweet. And totally into Ellie. It’s no wonder she is instantly drawn to him. But Michael has a secret. And he knows Ellie is hiding something, too. They’ve both discovered they have powers beyond their imagining. Powers that are otherworldly.
Ellie and Michael are determined to uncover what they are, and how they got this way . . . together. But the truth has repercussions neither could have imagined. Soon they find themselves center stage in an ancient conflict that threatens to destroy everything they love. And it is no longer clear whether Ellie and Michael will choose the same side.
In this electrifying novel, Heather Terrell spins a gripping supernatural tale about true love, destiny, and the battle of good versus evil.
Editorials
Publishers Weekly
In the launch of a series with a biblical twist on supernatural creatures, 16-year-old Ellie Faneuil desperately wants to be normal, but is weirded out by her ability to fly and to see what people are thinking by touching them. New student Michael is certain they are meant to be together: not only does he know her secrets, but he can also fly, and he teaches her that tasting blood is euphorically addictive and a powerful tool. Just as Ellie learns that she is a valuable key in a battle that has fallen angels struggling between returning to the light or turning mankind toward darkness, she and Michael are targeted by a malevolent angel seeking to control them. Ellie's inexplicable attraction to the enigmatic Michael is a familiar device, but adult author Terrell (Brigid of Kildare), in her first book for teens, weaves fresh complexity into vampire and angel lore. While some supporting characters are thinly drawn, Ellie's friendships are deep and abiding—a reflection on the story's smart, thoughtful, and resourceful heroine. Ages 12–up. (Jan.)VOYA -
Ellie Faneuil is an ordinary girl, hanging with her BFF Ruth, avoiding the snobs, and spending summers with her professor parents in third-world countries feeding the hungry. But when Michael Chase catches her eye, it is magnetic, and she is quickly drawn into a romance with him on the sly. When he invades her ever-present night dream of flying, however, and tries to convince her they are both vampires, Ellie feels her control slipping. Her desperate need for answers—for she can, in fact, fly—drives her to embrace danger and risk losing Ruth and her parents' trust. Terrell's first YA novel is a fast-paced paranormal thriller for fans of Shiver (Scholastic, 2009/VOYA December 2009) and Hush Hush (Simon & Schuster, 2009/VOYA December 2009). With a strong sense of place, relentless story line, and seemingly no way out for Ellie, the story moves at a break-neck pace, sometimes at the expense of character development. Fallen Angel delves into ancient Biblical times to discover the Nephilim and bring them into the twenty-first century. The writing is straightforward but lacks grace and depth, except perhaps in the development of the sinister Ezekiel. In spite of offering nothing unique, the novel will nonetheless be popular with teen girls as they shift from the Twilight books to the new angel craze. Reviewer: Melissa MooreSchool Library Journal
Gr 9 Up—Ellie Faneuil, 16, has intense psychic flashes and vivid flying dreams, but no memory of meeting the irresistible Michael Chase in Guatemala three years earlier. This memory lapse was caused by her parents, fallen angels dedicated to the good, who sought to delay Ellie's destined meeting with him in an effort to postpone the "end days." Newly met Ellie and Michael cannot resist one another and begin to explore the powers that Michael embraces and Ellie denies. Possibly too-obvious clues indicate that she is "the Elect," the half-angel, half-human leader who will emerge when the fallen angels, evil and good, will battle for supremacy. Ezekiel, who is determined to bring Ellie to the dark side, confronts Michael and Ellie in Boston's Quincy Market and engages him in mortal combat. Much of the action in this apocryphal Bible-based fantasy takes place in and around a Maine high school, complete with Queen Bees and Carrie-like prom plans (using social media, not pig's blood). The relationship between Ellie and Michael is fated, passionate, and related to the exchange of blood, a detail that encourages Michael's early belief that he and Ellie are vampires. Terrell controls the pace of Ellie's first-person narrative, and her characterization is less vapid than that of many other heroines of contemporary YA supernatural romances. The plot is overconstructed, however, and the writing includes some amateurish conventions, including telling about characters' personalities rather than showing them through their actions. Still, the prose is clean, the action is fast, and the sexual heat between Ellie and Michael is intense but not explicit. All in all, teens should find this a reasonably satisfying beginning to a new series.—Janice M. Del Negro, GSLIS Dominican University, River Forest, ILKirkus Reviews
Ellspeth Faneuil has been hiding her flying dreams and the "flashes" of people's inner thoughts she receives when she touches them. When she meets and falls for new student Michael, Ellie discovers that her flying ability is not merely a dream and that tasting blood gives her more intense flashes and power. Not certain if she is a vampire, as Michael suggests, or the offspring of a Nephilim, or fallen angel, as her parents are forced to admit, Ellie tries to figure out who—or what—she is, helping scorned classmates, evading an evil Nephilim, tracking down a Harvard scholar who studies vampires around the world and falling in love in the process. What saves this YA debut from being another run-of-the-mill supernatural romance with a vulnerable girl, stereotyped characters, flat dialogue and clichéd chases are interesting explanations of the lesser-known legend that links Nephilim with vampires and the Book of Enoch, an apocalyptic religious text that was never included in the Bible. An abrupt ending with unanswered questions leaves room for a sequel. (Supernatural romance. YA)