Join Books.org — it's free

Book cover of Ruby
Fantasy Fiction

Ruby

by Francesca Lia Block, Carmen Staton
Available on Bookshop Write a review

Books.org participates in affiliate programs including Bookshop.org and the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program. We may earn a commission from qualifying purchases made through links on this page, at no additional cost to you.

Log in to track your reading progress.

Overview

From the beloved author of Necklace of Kisses comes a modern-day fairy tale of a willful and intuitive heroine and a world of shocking realism and transcendent magic.

Francesca Lia Block, this time with co-writer Carmen Staton, introduces readers to Ruby, a Midwestern girl named for the jewel that is believed to ward off evil spirits. Ruby's special gift is a sixth sense that makes her at one with nature and gives her the ability to know her own destiny.

After growing up in an abusive family, Ruby escapes to Los Angeles and learns of her soulmate β€” Orion β€” a British actor. She travels to England, where she works at a potions and herbs shop, and through a series of coincidental circumstances, ends up nursing Orion back to health without confessing that she has been on a quest to find him all along. But just when she thinks her dream is becoming a reality, Ruby is stopped in her tracks by the violent demons of her past. Only by facing the darkness together can she and Orion finally fulfill their destiny.

As with Necklace of Kisses, Block, here with Staton, breaks the mold. In Ruby, readers will find a story about the power of our minds to overcome the past and ultimately change the course of our lives.

Synopsis

From the beloved author of Necklace of Kisses comes a modern-day fairy tale of a willful and intuitive heroine and a world of shocking realism and transcendent magic.

Francesca Lia Block, this time with co-writer Carmen Staton, introduces readers to Ruby, a Midwestern girl named for the jewel that is believed to ward off evil spirits. Ruby's special gift is a sixth sense that makes her at one with nature and gives her the ability to know her own destiny.

After growing up in an abusive family, Ruby escapes to Los Angeles and learns of her soulmate — Orion — a British actor. She travels to England, where she works at a potions and herbs shop, and through a series of coincidental circumstances, ends up nursing Orion back to health without confessing that she has been on a quest to find him all along. But just when she thinks her dream is becoming a reality, Ruby is stopped in her tracks by the violent demons of her past. Only by facing the darkness together can she and Orion finally fulfill their destiny.

As with Necklace of Kisses, Block, here with Staton, breaks the mold. In Ruby, readers will find a story about the power of our minds to overcome the past and ultimately change the course of our lives.

Publishers Weekly

YA author Block (the Weetzie Bat books) collaborates on a novel yet maintains her trademarks: fairy tale simplicity combined with wrenching emotional realism, served with a hefty side of over-the-top romance. It's told mostly from the perspective of premonition-prone Ruby, who, along with her sister, Opal, grows up terrorized by a chillingly abusive father while their loving but eerily passive mother looks on. Interspersed throughout are vignettes from the life of a British boy named Orion Woolf, who grows up with a kind but deceitful sorceress mother, Isabelle, and blooms into dangerous beauty. Ruby, seeking solace from a bad relationship, moves to Los Angeles and works as a nanny for a movie producer whose film stars Orion, who has become an Orlando Bloomesque star. Instantly smitten, Ruby buys a plane ticket to England, where she traipses through a psychedelic London, lands in Orion's ultra-bucolic hometown, finds a job in Isabelle's magic shop and hones her innate powers. When a badly ailing Orion comes home to hide from the world, Ruby uses her gifts to nurse him back to health-though, as her intensifying flashbacks to the horrors of her childhood gradually reveal, she may be even more in need of healing. (July 3) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

About the Author, Francesca Lia Block

Francesca Lia Block, winner of the prestigious Margaret A. Edwards Award, is the author of many acclaimed and bestselling books, including Weetzie Bat, Dangerous Angels: The Weetzie Bat Books, the collection of stories Blood Roses, the poetry collection How to (Un)Cage a Girl, the novel The Waters & the Wild, the illustrated novella House of Dolls, and the gothic vampire romance Pretty Dead. Her work is published around the world.

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Log in to write one.

Editorials

People

β€œWomen weaned on ... Block’s ...fairy-tale fantasy and Hollywood glitz will fall under the spell of this grown-up romance...”

Los Angeles Times

"...as irresistibly smooth and refreshing as ice cream."

People Magazine

"Women weaned on ... Block’s ...fairy-tale fantasy and Hollywood glitz will fall under the spell of this grown-up romance..."

Publishers Weekly

YA author Block (the Weetzie Bat books) collaborates on a novel yet maintains her trademarks: fairy tale simplicity combined with wrenching emotional realism, served with a hefty side of over-the-top romance. It's told mostly from the perspective of premonition-prone Ruby, who, along with her sister, Opal, grows up terrorized by a chillingly abusive father while their loving but eerily passive mother looks on. Interspersed throughout are vignettes from the life of a British boy named Orion Woolf, who grows up with a kind but deceitful sorceress mother, Isabelle, and blooms into dangerous beauty. Ruby, seeking solace from a bad relationship, moves to Los Angeles and works as a nanny for a movie producer whose film stars Orion, who has become an Orlando Bloomesque star. Instantly smitten, Ruby buys a plane ticket to England, where she traipses through a psychedelic London, lands in Orion's ultra-bucolic hometown, finds a job in Isabelle's magic shop and hones her innate powers. When a badly ailing Orion comes home to hide from the world, Ruby uses her gifts to nurse him back to health-though, as her intensifying flashbacks to the horrors of her childhood gradually reveal, she may be even more in need of healing. (July 3) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

Ruby's psychic abilities give her the confidence to escape her Midwestern home and abusive past to work as a nanny for a Los Angeles movie producer. After viewing a film starring British actor Orion, the infatuated and determined Ruby uproots to England. There, she obtains a position assisting Isabelle, Orion's mother, in her magic shop and slowly gains the trust of Orion's parents. Improving her powers through Isabelle's tutelage, Ruby learns enough to heal Orion physically and mentally after he is struck by a terrible accident. As Ruby and Orion's love strengthens, Ruby's past forces her to confront her own fears before she can fully heal herself. Block (Necklace of Kisses) and Staton, who is currently at work on a children's book, have created an enchanted tale heavily interwoven with Wiccan ideology. Recommended for popular fiction collections, especially for younger adult readers and libraries with a strong Block following. [See Prepub Alert, LJ 3/15/06.]-Joy St. John, Henderson Dist. P.L., NV Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

School Library Journal

Adult/High School-This is a lovely, lyrical story of a young woman who does her best to overcome an abusive past and live the happily-ever-after fairy tale. Ruby leaves the Midwest for L.A. and is employed as a nanny when she finds that life, while good, could be so much more if only she could be with the love of her life, an actor named Orion. She goes to England to find his family and to see if she can meet him. Patience and planning put Ruby at the right place at the right time. Alternating voices and a realistic but experimental style, sparked with magic ritual and spells, elevate the story from ordinary to extraordinary. Ruby's point of view shifts from first to second to third person, mirroring flashbacks that reveal the essence of who she is and emphasizing her mystical connection to her soul mate. In contrast, Orion's point of view stays grounded firmly in third person. Ruby discovers that while you can leave the past behind, it will never leave you alone unless you confront it. Teens who like Block's work may miss the urban punk edginess of her "Shangri-LA" books, but this collaboration will definitely draw new readers with its tempered, yet recognizable, style.-Charli Osborne, Oxford Public Library, MI Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Stronger-willed than the father who abused her, a Midwestern girl sets out to find a better life. The dynamics of Ruby's father-dominated family life revolve around not getting caught alone with Dad in the basement. Ruby's older sister Opal gets the brunt of their father's sexual fury; their mother, a woman given to flights of fancy, never asks questions that might relieve her daughters' plight. Ruby's salvation comes from within: She has a vivid dream life; a sixth sense; and abundant love for nature, the animals she finds in the woods around her family's home and the spirits she senses but cannot see. For much of her life, she has known she must leave home, and when the opportunity arises-she is offered a job as nanny to two beloved children of a wealthy L.A. couple-she takes it. But there she learns that it's only the first step of her journey. Next, she needs to find her soulmate, and does so among the DVDs in the family film library. His name is Orion, a young British actor who has taken an unexplained leave of absence from Hollywood. Ruby travels to his hometown in England, ingratiates herself with his parents-the mother is a crone who sells potions and herbs; the father is a professor who researches the power of the feminine-and eventually is asked to help the parents, who have been secretly caring for Orion, injured months before in a fall from a horse. Ruby, whose dream world often bleeds into her reality, is at once frightened of her visions and willed by them. Many themes recurrent in Block's work (Necklace of Kisses, 2005, etc., and the YA Weetzie Bat series) merge in this novel-magic, domestic violence, self-determination, the fortitude of women-and although the premise isslight and familiar, the storytelling casts a spell that transforms the narrative into something more. A moody fairy tale of hope.

Book Details

Published
July 1, 2007
Publisher
HarperCollins Publishers
Pages
224
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780060840587

More by Francesca Lia Block

Similar books