Join Books.org — it's free

Teen Fiction - Horror & Suspense
The Blood Confession by Alisa Libby β€” book cover

The Blood Confession

by Alisa Libby
Write a review
Log in to track your reading progress.

Overview

Erzebet is young, beautiful, rich, and imprisoned in her castle, waiting to be sentenced for murder. In a brilliant fiction debut, Alisa M. Libby resurrects the real-life Erzebet Bathory, a seventeenth-century countess who believed that bathing in human blood would preserve her looks forever. The jailed countess tells her story from her birth, which was overshadowed by a bad omen, to her mother's mental deterioration, Erzebet's own love for a mysterious figure, and the crimes she committed in pursuit of eternal life.

This gripping novel combines gothic horror and romance as it explores the connection between beauty and power.

About the Author: Alisa M. Libby lives in Boston.

Synopsis

Erzebet is young, beautiful, rich, and imprisoned in her castle, waiting to be sentenced for murder. In a brilliant fiction debut, Alisa M. Libby resurrects the real-life Erzebet Bathory, a seventeenth-century countess who believed that bathing in human blood would preserve her looks forever. The jailed countess tells her story from her birth, which was overshadowed by a bad omen, to her mother's mental deterioration, Erzebet's own love for a mysterious figure, and the crimes she committed in pursuit of eternal life.

This gripping novel combines gothic horror and romance as it explores the connection between beauty and power.

VOYA

Erzebet, daughter of Count Bizecka, was born under a cursed omen. A star fell the night she was born, marking her out as a child who would die young or live forever. From childhood she is desperate not to age and lose the beauty that is her most praised attribute. With the help of a mysterious stranger, she discovers that blood can hold the secrets of eternal youth. At first, she only takes a little blood from willing servant girls, but her hunger for power grows until she is bathing in the blood of her murder victims. This gothic novel, set in sixteenth-century Hungary, is a young woman's dark search for power over her body and her life. Libby's novel is not for the faint of heart or those with short attention spans. Teens expecting gory details will not be disappointed, but they will have to wait through most of the book as Erzebet transforms from a spoiled little girl to a woman obsessed with staying beautiful no matter what the cost. The first-person narrative style gives a disturbingly human glimpse into Erzebet's character. Libby's unreliable narrator blurs the lines between reality and insanity, leaving the reader to choose the truth. Give this book to teens looking for something deep and long to bite into.

About the Author, Alisa Libby

Alisa M. Libby lives outside of Boston, Massachusetts.

Reviews

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

Editorials

VOYA - Leslie McCombs

Erzebet, daughter of Count Bizecka, was born under a cursed omen. A star fell the night she was born, marking her out as a child who would die young or live forever. From childhood she is desperate not to age and lose the beauty that is her most praised attribute. With the help of a mysterious stranger, she discovers that blood can hold the secrets of eternal youth. At first, she only takes a little blood from willing servant girls, but her hunger for power grows until she is bathing in the blood of her murder victims. This gothic novel, set in sixteenth-century Hungary, is a young woman's dark search for power over her body and her life. Libby's novel is not for the faint of heart or those with short attention spans. Teens expecting gory details will not be disappointed, but they will have to wait through most of the book as Erzebet transforms from a spoiled little girl to a woman obsessed with staying beautiful no matter what the cost. The first-person narrative style gives a disturbingly human glimpse into Erzebet's character. Libby's unreliable narrator blurs the lines between reality and insanity, leaving the reader to choose the truth. Give this book to teens looking for something deep and long to bite into.

School Library Journal

Gr 9 Up-As this novel opens, Countess Erzebet Bizecka, imprisoned in the castle tower awaiting trial for the murders of a number of her serving girls, recounts her gruesome story. A beautiful young noblewoman living in 16th-century Hungary, Erzebet becomes obsessed with youth and beauty after her mother goes insane, and performs a ritual that involves bathing in blood. As Erzebet herself teeters on the edge of sanity, she begins to hallucinate about an attractive young man who encourages her "hobby" and eventually convinces her that she must commit murder in order to gain immortality. Erzebet, based on a real-life Hungarian "blood countess," is an interesting character. She feels trapped and powerless in a world dominated by men, but soon learns that her beauty is a source of power. Readers will sympathize with her feelings of loneliness and abandonment, while being repulsed by her actions. The descriptions are mildly gruesome without being overly graphic or sensationalized. Even so, the book is not for the faint of heart. While the characterization is solid, the depiction of Erzebet's descent into madness is overly lengthy, which may deter all but die-hard horror fans.-Michele Capozzella, Chappaqua Public Library, NY Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

In 16th-century Hungary, a conceptually interesting but sluggishly paced gothic horror unfolds. Erzebet (based on historical Countess Bathory) is the daughter of an austere count and mad countess. A prophecy foretelling either early death or eternal life haunts her childhood and drives her to seek control of her destiny through blood's sacred power. Every midnight she bleeds virginal servant girls, slicing their arms with a knife. She bathes her face in the blood, creates makeup with it and slashes girls to death so she can sit underneath their strung-up dripping corpses. She finds no repentance, only madness: "Peasants are the disposable living meat of this country," and she herself is God, creating heaven and hell in her castle. Libby's combination of history, fairy tales and the Bible is vivid, but her language is distractingly lofty and the length tedious. Those few readers who make it through the plodding bulk will be rewarded with a suspenseful and creative final quarter that reinvigorates the early fairy-tale theme. (Fiction. YA)

Book Details

Published
August 1, 2006
Publisher
Penguin Group (USA) Incorporated
Pages
360
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780525477327

More by Alisa Libby

Similar books