Gemma Doyle Trilogy

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Gemma Doyle Trilogy
Author Libba Bray
Country United States
Language English
Series A Great and Terrible Beauty, Rebel Angels, The Sweet Far Thing
Genre(s) Fantasy novel
Publisher Random House
Publication date December 9, 2003 - December 26, 2007
Media type Print (Hardcover)

The Gemma Doyle Trilogy[1] is a trilogy of fantasy novels by Libba Bray. They are told from the perspective of Gemma Doyle, a girl in the late nineteenth century. The Gemma Doyle Trilogy consists of three books: A Great and Terrible Beauty (published December 9, 2003), Rebel Angels (published 2006), and the The Sweet Far Thing (published December 26, 2007).

Contents

[edit] Plot

The story revolves around Gemma Doyle, a young woman sent from her home in British India to the mysterious boarding school, Spence Academy. There she meets Ann, Felicity, and Pippa, three other remarkable young women and together they discover the dark past of their school. Gemma learns of her own heritage and the magical powers she possesses.

The three books in the trilogy span just one year, with A Great and Terrible Beauty beginning in June of 1895 and The Sweet Far Thing ending in June of 1896.

[edit] Characters

[edit] References to other literature

A Great and Terrible Beauty refers to many literary classics. Among those mentioned are:

  • Persephone: Pippa is sometimes seen as being like the tragic, beautiful Greek Queen of the Underworld, who ate pomegranate seeds to stay in the Underworld, just as Pippa ate berries in the Realm [2]
  • The Lady of Shalott by Tennyson: Miss Hester Asa Moore leads her art class in a discussion of the Elaine, The Lady of Shalott, and art based upon Tennyson's poem, in Chapter Nine. This poem has special significance for Ann and Pippa, who both see themselves as being trapped, as the lady was. Miss Moore states that the lady dies "because she lets herself float through [the] world." Stanzas five, six, eight, and fifteen of The Lady of Shalott are also quoted, as a form of introduction, before Chapter One.
  • The Perils of Lucy, A Girl's Own Story: A fictional three-volume novel that Ann loves. Gemma thinks that stories like it (a popular staple of Victorian literature) about a "poor, timid girl" who is greatly put upon by her wicked peers, before eventually being found to be of noble birth, are "poppycock". As with The Lady of Shalott, the implication is that women, even in a male-dominated society, can only expect to be happy if they do something to make themselves happy, instead of sitting passively by.

[edit] Film

A Great and Terrible Beauty
Directed by Charles Sturridge
Produced by Icon Productions
Gotham Group
Firstsight Films
Written by Libba Bray (novel)
Charles Sturridge
Language English
IMDb profile

In July, 2006, Icon Productions, the film production company run by Mel Gibson, announced that it would adapt the book into a film based on A Great and Terrible Beauty, to be written and directed by Charles Sturridge. [3]

[edit] References

[edit] External links