Juliet Immortal
Juliet Immortal book cover

Juliet Immortal

Paperback – September 11, 2012

Price
$9.99
Format
Paperback
Pages
320
Publisher
Ember
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0385740173
Dimensions
5.56 x 0.69 x 8.25 inches
Weight
10.2 ounces

Description

STACEY JAY lives in the California wine country with her husband and their two boys. She is the author of the Megan Berry, Zombi Settler series and several other books for young adults. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. ONEVERONA, ITALY, 1304Tonight, he could have come through the door--the castello is quiet, even the servants asleep in their beds, and Nurse would have let him in--but he chooses the window, climbing through the tangle of night flowers, carrying petals in on his clothes.He stumbles on a loose stone and falls to the floor, grinning as I rush to meet him.He is a romantic, a dreamer, and never afraid to play the fool. He is fearless and reckless and brave and I love him for it. Desperately. Love for him steals my breath away, makes me feel I am dying and being reborn every time I look into his eyes or run trembling fingers through his brown curls.I love him for the way he sprawls on the freshly scrubbed stones, strong legs flexing beneath his hose, as if there is no cause for worry, as if we have not broken every rule and do not face banishment from the only homes we have ever known. I love him for the way he finds my hand, presses it to his smooth cheek, inhaling as if my skin smells sweeter than the petals clinging to his coat. I love him for the way he whispers my name, "Juliet"--a prayer for deliverance, a promise of pleasure, a vow that all this sweet everything he is to me will be forever.Forever and always.Despite our parents, and our prince, and the blood spilled in the plaza. Despite the fact that we have little money and fewer friends and our once-shining futures are clouded and dim."Tell me that tomorrow will never come." He pulls me to the floor beside him, cradling me on his lap, hand curling over my hip in a way it has not before. Heat flares from the tips of his fingers, spreading through me, reminding me I will soon be his wife in every way. Every touch is sanctified. Everything we will do tonight is meant to be, a celebration of the vows we have made and the love that consumes us.I drop my lips to his. Joy bleeds from his mouth to mine and I sigh the lie into the fire of him. "It will never come.""Tell me that I will always be here in this room. Alone with you. And that you will always be the most beautiful girl in the world." His hands are at the ties on the back of my dress, slow and patient, slipping each ribbon through its loop with a deliberate flick of his fingers.No urgent, shame-filled fumbling in the dark for us. He is steady and sure, and every candle shines bright, the better to see the tenderness in his eyes, to be more certain with every passing moment that this is no youthful mistake. This is love. Real. Magnificent. Eternal."Always," I whisper, so full of adoration the emotion borders on worship. A part of me feels that to love so is sacrilege, but I do not care. There is nothing in the world but Romeo. For the rest of my life, he is the god at whose feet I will kneel.His cheek presses to mine, his warm breath in my ear making mine come faster. "Juliet . . . you are . . ."I am his goddess. I can feel it in the way he shudders as my fingers come to the buttons of his cotehardie and pluck them from their holes, one by one, revealing the thin linen of the shirt beneath."You are everything," he says, eyes shining. "Everything."And I know that I am. I am his moon, and his brightly shining star. I am his life, his heart. I am all that and the answer to every unspoken question, the comfort for every hurt, the companion who will walk beside him from now until the end of our lives, reveling in the bliss of each simple chore done in his name, overflowing with beauty because I am blessed to spend my life with my love.My love, my love, my love. I could hear the words a thousand times and never grow tired of them. Not ever."Forever," I whisper into the hot skin at his neck, sighing as the last tie holding my dress to my body falls away.TWOSOLVANG, CALIFORNIA, PRESENT DAYDying is easy. It's coming back that hurts like hell."Oh . . ." I press my hands to my forehead, where hot, tacky liquid pours from a cut above my eyebrow.There is a lot of blood this time. Blood on my hands, smeared onto the dashboard, dripping through my fingers onto my jeans, leaving black spots I can see in the dim moonlight shining through the car's glass sunroof. It's messy, frightening, but, amazingly, the accident hasn't killed her. Killed me.Me, now. Her, sometime again soon, depending on how long it takes to ensure the safety of the soul mates I've been sent to protect. Or how long it takes Romeo to convince one lover to sacrifice the other for the boon of eternal life.It might not be long. He excels at his work.Either way, Ariel Dragland will wear this shell again. Until then she'll wait in the realm where I've spent most of my eternity, in the mists of forgetting, that place outside of time where the gray stretches on forever.I've been assured by my contact in the Ambassadors of Light that there are worse places, realms of torment where the boy who bartered our love for immortality will suffer someday. Nurse never uses the word hell, but I like to imagine that Romeo will number among hell's inhabitants. Of course, she never mentions heaven, either, or whether I might go there when my work is finished . . . if it is ever finished.There are a lot of things Nurse sees fit not to mention. Including the exact workings of the magic that pulls me from the mist again and again, now more than thirty times in seven centuries. All I know is life comes suddenly. One moment I'm numb and bodiless, the next I'm slipping into another's skin, another's life--the ultimate, dreadful disguise.I shiver as the memory of Ariel's last moments sweeps through me. I watch her snatch the wheel from the driver's hands before a deadly turn in the road and pull hard to the right, hoping the dive into the ravine will kill them both--her and the boy who hurt her. My eyes flick to the driver's seat. The boy--Dylan--slumps forward, the downward tilt of the car making his limp body curl around the wheel. He is still, not a puff of breath escaping his parted lips.It seems one half of Ariel's wish has been granted.I shiver again, but I can't say I'm sorry. I know what he did, can feel Ariel's shame and rage rush inside me as the rest of her life pours in to fill the empty corners in my mind.Behind my eyes flash images from her eighteen years. I focus, sucking in every detail, taking her memories as my own.Tiptoe, tiptoe, always on tiptoe. Up the stairs, across the kitchen, down the hall to the room where the crayons live and I can breathe. Where she isn't watching. My mother, with her sad, sad eyes.Seven, ten, fifteen, eighteen years old and still there is nothing finer than a blank sheet of paper, the white promise that the world can be what I make it. A magical place, an adventurous place, a possible place. Erasers take away the mistakes. Another coat of paint to cover them up. Black and red and purple and blue. Always blue.Mom sees in blue. She sees the scars she made. I was six. She sees Gemma, my one friend, as a mistake, not a lifeline. She sees my hours alone and feels more powerfully every hour she's wasted. I am the waste, the thing that's eaten her youth alive. Refused to cough up the bones.Sometimes it seems all I have are bones, scraps, a frame with nothing to fill in the empty space. Sometimes I hate her for it, sometimes I hate myself, sometimes I hate everyone and everything and imagine the world melting the way the grease melted my skin.Skin and bones. Mom and I are both so thin. Hugs hurt, but there aren't many. Not for years. There are surgeries and pain and bright lights and then days trapped in the house with the shades drawn on our shame. There is the darkness inside, that baleful intruder that comes just when I dare to believe I might one day be whole.There is school and the misery of being a person unseen, the jealousy that I can't be wild and beautiful like Gemma, that I am always an audience, never a player. There is the frustration of words that won't come out of my mouth no matter how hard I try. A D in public speaking. The one step up to the podium is an impossible climb. Everest. Higher. I hate Mr. Stark for his frustrated sighs, hate the class for their muffled laughter. I want to hurt them, to show them how it feels to have your insides twisted into knots you can't unravel.Gemma doesn't care, tells me to get over it, stops sharing her adventures, closes the window into her vibrant world, forgets to pick me up for school at least twice a week. I'm losing everything. My only friend, my perfect GPA, my mind. How much longer can I live like this? Can I make it four more years, sleeping in that room, commuting to the nursing college in Santa Barbara, learning to live with more sickness and pain, when all I want to do is escape?But then . . . there is him. His smile, his voice singing so strong, cutting through the curtains where I hide with my paints, curling into my ear, spinning dreams I want to come true.They don't.It's a joke.We're kissing--slow, perfect kisses that make my heart race--when the text comes, asking if he's taken the Freak's virginity yet. He tries to hide the phone, but I see it. I start to cry, even though I'm not sad. I'm angry, so angry. He offers me fifty dollars--a piece of the bet--if I let him have what he's come for. I explode. I try to run from the car, but he grabs my hand, squeezing as he pulls back onto the road, telling me to "chill the hell out," promising to take me to a better place.But there is no better place. I know that by now. There are only mirrors reflecting disappointment, shattering it in a million different directions, filling the world until there is no way out. It will always be this way. Always, even when I finally leave the house on El Camino Road.The road, the road is . . . impossible. I won't let him drive it a second longer. I won't let him steer through the hole in the mountain down to the beach, where the cold, dark ocean waits like a nightmare creeping. I won't let him.Not now. Not ever again.

Features & Highlights

  • Fans of Maggie Stiefvater's
  • Shiver
  • and Becca Fitzpatrick's
  • Hush
  • will relish this intense paranormal love story featuring Romeo and Juliet, literary history's most tragic couple, who meet again, not as true lovers, but truly as enemies.
  • The most tragic love story in history . . .Juliet Capulet didn't take her own life. She was murdered by the person she trusted most, her new husband, Romeo Montague, a sacrifice made to ensure his own immortality. But what Romeo didn't anticipate was that Juliet would be granted eternity, as well, and would become an agent for the Ambassadors of Light. For 700 years, she's fought Romeo for the souls of true lovers, struggling to preserve romantic love and the lives of the innocent. Until the day she meets someone she's forbidden to love, and Romeo, oh Romeo, will do everything in his power to destroy that love."These violent delights have violent endsAnd in their triumph die, like fire and powder,Which as they kiss consume."
  • —Romeo and Juliet
  • by William Shakespeare

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(62)
★★★★
25%
(51)
★★★
15%
(31)
★★
7%
(14)
23%
(47)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Quantum Leap meets Match.com

So...this was a hard book to rate - some aspects of this story are great, but the bad stuff is really, REALLY bad.

I love the whole idea of Romeo and Juliet being enemies. The scenes where they were trying to kill each other in the opening chapters were awesome. Romeo was so very psychotic, I loved that. I liked Juliet's character for the most part as well - a girl betrayed by her former love, she is serious and driven and now lives only to fulfill her duties.

And her duties are...to help people find true love (a little lame, but whatever. fits into the whole Romeo & Juliet theme). So every 50 years or something like that, she "shifts" into a stranger's body, assumes that person's identity, guides that person to find their soul mate, then shifts out with the person coming back into their own body to live happily ever after with their true love. And Romeo magically pops up each time to try to thwart her efforts. Except this time, there's something odd about the shift, and both Romeo and Juliet know that nothing will ever be the same again.

So, not bad right? Pretty interesting premise, good characters, tolerable plot. But here's where it gets bad -- the ending. Was so dumb. Seriously dumb. *SPOILER alert* I was very unhappy with Juliet's happy ending - it came about in an unbelievably unbelievable way. Alternate universes? Really? Such a cop out! Such a CHEESY cop out. In addition, all the other plot elements disintegrated into a jumbled mess.

Well, it's got a beautiful cover, with a lovely title. I waited until this came out on paperback to buy it instead of doing my normal kindle purchase. Looks pretty on the bookshelf, but wish this awesome idea had been executed better. Won't be reading the sequel.
2 people found this helpful
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The Unofficial Addiction Book Fan Club Review

We are The Unofficial Addiction Book Fan Club, to know more about this book, go to the post in our website:

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The Unofficial Addiction Book Fan Club's Review:

"She will fight for light, and he for dark, 
Battling through the ages for loves sweet spark. 
Wherever two souls adore truly, you will find them.
The brave Juliet and the wicked Romeo."

Juliet Immortal is the first book of the Juliet Immortal series. The plot of this story is quite unique. We really liked this book, because it is a total and brutal twist to the worldwide famous story of Shakespeare: Romeo & Juliet.
The beloved star-crossed lovers from Verona, have not had a happily ever after dead either. The truth is that Juliet did not kill herself, Romeo murdered her. He sacrificed her soul for his own immortality, but with the only condition of serving the Dark Ambassadors (the dark side). However, he never expected that Juliet would accept a position in the Light Ambassadors troops in order to get revenge for her premature death; she was not meant to die. If she had not fell for Romeo, she would have had a normal live. It was not simply her moment to leave.
Since then, every fifty years, Juliet is sent to Earth where Romeo is waiting for her to show up and kill her. Over and over again. They fight for new couples that have the potential to be soul mates. Juliet, for the Light, to the lovers to fall for each other. And Romeo, for the Dark, to make the girl kill her lover.
This battle has been going on since the beginning of time, and in our time, Light is loosing the battle.
It has been a long time since Juliet has been called for a mission and when she awakes in Ariel's body, a girl who tried to kill his boyfriend when she found out that their relationship was just a bet, she awakes near Romeo. Well, apparently, the not-so-nice-Ariel's-fake-boyfriend is dead after dying in the car accident that Ariel caused and Romeo has inhabited his body. That has never happened before. It is true that Romeo always find Juliet, but in a couple of days before her appearance.
While she tries to save her life and Ariel's, she meets Ben. He was in a car and happened to be near the accident. They run away from the scene when Romeo tries to kill Juliet even in front of an innocent person.
Juliet and Ben are drawn to each other instantly, although Juliet resist her feelings reminding herself that she is not the owner of the body she is in. She was sent to Earth with a mission and she has to complete it, not fall for the cutest, honest and good guy that Ben is.
Juliet cannot believe that Romeo has not followed her and kill her right away and she knows something is off. Therefore, when Romeo appears and explains to Juliet that they are alone in that city for the first time in centuries, he meant without any type of Ambassadors. Why? Romeo swears that is because is their time. The time when they start to love each other again, like nothing has ever happened, in order to save their souls and reclaim their old bodies, the ones where he was Romeo Montague and she Juliet Capulet. Can she trust him after all she is being truth with him? She did not kill her and betrayed once, but more than once in centuries and centuries of battling one another. And most important, can she love him again? That love she gave so purely, so innocent and selfless and was betrayed for eternity.
And then there's Ben. She knows she is falling for him, but everything gets more messed up when she discovers that one of the star-crossed lovers that she is sent here to save from Romeo's tricks is Ben and the other, Ariel's best friend, Gemma.
How can she still be in love with Ben when he is in love with Gemma? She is not Gemma's best friend, but it feels like betrayal.
Would she risk everything for love or would she fight for the cause? Would Juliet be able to forgive Romeo and love him back in order to save herself for another fifty years in the mist even if that means saving Romeo as well, after everything he did? Would she renew her votes with the Light Ambassadors, will she betray them for love or will she let herself die forever?

"Love doesn't want people to stay ignorant and frightened. Love doesn't value obedience over all else. Love doesn't judge and find some lives--or loves--more valuable than others. Love doesn't use people and throw them away. Love stays, and makes you stronger, even when the person you love is gone."

We loved this book from the beginning to the end. At first we were suspicious because of how would be the story. We all have heard of Romeo & Juliet and we were afraid to be disappointed. Obviously, that was not the case. We were impressed and, of course, glad to see that Stacey Jay has done an excellent work balancing between paranormal things (immortal souls, The Ambassadors, etc.) and regular life things (school stuff, relationship problems, etc.). Although this mixture of genres, we did not feel lost or confused by the story not once and we were not annoyed by altering Shakespeare's story. We loved the twist of the story and how the plot was related. So well, we almost felt like we were on Juliet's skin, well... more or less. You know what we mean. The main character is strong, determined and full of emotions that she is enable to express because of what she chose to be when she was murdered by her lover. We felt betrayed hearing the story, we cried and we felt sorry for Juliet. We even wanted to help her and kill Romeo for her!
We also liked a lot the determination in Ben's character. It is like I know what I want, I know you want it, so marry me baby right now. Even when the situations get to a point when you, as a reader, think that have no solution left to rescue the situation, there goes Ben's personality kicking everything down. Despite this, we could not shake the feeling of a Romeo 2.0 in Ben's behavior. We mean, Romeo was young and desperate and heartbroken when he fell from Juliet. He truly believe he was in love with her and did everything in his power to ensure that the feeling would last forever, for eternity. Why is not Ben falling for the same temptation? Because of the second quote, book addicts! We were relieved to see that Ben was, in the end, everything we were hoping for.

In conclusion, we enjoyed so much reading Juliet Immortal that we strongly recommend you guys this book. Is a great and creative story about two star-crossed lovers who die and die and die and fight. Now seriously, we recommend this book with a five gorjuss doll in our addiction ranking. We were so hooked up in this story that we could not wait a minute to start reading the second book of the series: Romeo Redeemed. You cannot miss Juliet's side of the story and if she gets her happily ever after.

"I love you. I want to do everything with you. I want to marry you and have kids with you and get old with you. And then I want to die the day before you do, so I never have to live without you."
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For Those of Us Who Doubted Romeo and Juliet's 'Love' Would Last

In all honesty, I really didn't expect to like this. Romeo and Juliet was not my favorite play to begin with, and, because of its ubiquitousness, I've grown rather to loathe it. While I general hunt down retellings like Jaws hunts down the people of Amity, I make an exception for Romeo and Juliet most of the time. To my pleasant surprise though, I really, really was impressed with Juliet Immortal and am thrilled that I have a copy of the sequel Romeo Redeemed ready to go.

Stacey Jay made Romeo and Juliet palatable characters by completely changing things up. In this version, it turns out Romeo is totally willing to turn homicidal on Juliet in exchange for eternal life, given him by forces of evil known as the Mercenaries. Juliet, thanks to last minute intervention from Nurse, gets eternal life as well, signing on to work for the Ambassadors, the forces of light. I acknowledge that this all sounds patently ridiculous, but it's fantasy, so just take my word for it that, by and large, this paranormal plot line worked quite well for me.

Most of the narration (minus three chapters/intermezzos) is Juliet's first person perspective. Her work for the Ambassadors entails taking over another person's body, chosen seemingly at random. From this vantage point, her goal is to find a pair of lovers and make sure they reach true love, rather than one of them being recruited into the evil/eternal life scheme as happened with Romeo. While in another person's body, Juliet must avoid changing their life over much, but does try to improve things, which reminded me rather strongly of Mercy by Rebecca Lim.

This time, Juliet manifests in the body of a deeply depressed, lonely girl named April. Unfortunately, Romeo, who takes over dead bodies, restoring them to life and not the zombie-looking kind, appears in the same car with her, since April and Dylan had just been in a major car crash. Basically, Dylan had a bet that he could sleep with April, she found out, he tried to force her, and she crashed the car, killing him. In other words, Dylan sucks. Guess what, though! Romeo's WAY creepier. Call me morbid, but I got serious enjoyment out of watching the 'true lovers' end up such a hot mess.

Jay's writing and concept were phenomenal, and I was never bored. However, I did have some problems with the book. The main one is Juliet's gullibility. She's depicted as this strong, determined character, who has wised up from all of the horrible things Romeo has put her through. Though she supposedly works in pursuit of true love, she doesn't really believe in it anymore, and really just hopes for a chance to revenge herself on Romeo. All of that = fantastic.

Unfortunately, Juliet, it seems, hasn't learned much of anything. She immediately instaloves with someone else, Ben, the guy who saves her from Romeo that first night. Good lord, girl! Didn't you learn the first time that it doesn't hurt to take some time and not rush into things? It's hard to believe she's got her emotional walls up, if she instaloves so easily. She doesn't even fight it very hard. Heck, the true lovers she's sent to help fight their love more than she does, for all her wordy protestations.

I just wish she had been that way in all of her life, been a bit more questioning of love the second time around. That's just not who she is, though, I guess. On an unrelated note, can we stop with the whole "I'm writing a retelling of this play set in high school, so I'll totally have the school perform this play!" thing. Yes, that was once a clever gambit, but that ship has sailed, dear authors. It has been done enough; try something new. Note: SHS doesn't actually perform Romeo and Juliet; they perform West Side Story, which is almost worse.

The ending, too, seemed a bit overly convenient. I didn't really feel like everyone could emerge from this tale quite so happily. Of course, there's always the next book, which might be slightly different. I am eminently curious to see what angle Jay takes in the next book.
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Yearning to Read Review

SUMMARY -
Juliet Capulet, the figure of tragic love all over the world, has a mission - Find Romeo and prevent him from breaking up true lovers, and gathering Mercenaries for the enemy. But this time something's different. There's a change in the air - both of the doomed lovers can feel it - and the victim may not be who they think. And with Juliet seeing apparitions and fighting a love that can never come to pass, the mission - to save true love - might be more more deadly than anyone could have guessed.

MY THOUGHTS -
Let's start with what I didn't like - the last quarter of the book. What even was that? Kinda creepy, but not well explained. There were a lot of holes that had me shaking my head with confusing. It lost its believability , to, like a quick-fix ending.

BUT. I did really really enjoy the beginning. It startled me, how intense it was. I loved the dynamics between characters and how the story elements brought them together. Ben is by far my favorite character. So sweet, loving and sacrificial. GAH! These scenes with him - all of them - were so great!

But again. The end. It stumped me and I didn't really get to enjoy finishing it.

Since I got the second book for review, I'll read it, and let you guys know what I think. Hopefully it'll be better?

This book reminds me of...
Red dresses (The cover...I cheated)
The cliffs of California that overlook the ocean
Hills of flowers
Ghostly apparitions
Self-struggles and fears
The burning flame of love
How much I love the name Benjamin
Retellings

For the Parents -
I don't remember there being much - a few passionate kisses, some language, maybe a few crude references. Recommended 14+
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Incredible story!

It took me a while to get through this book because just like the original, most of this story is tragic. Still, it was a good story so I kept picking it back up even though I kept thinking 'this is going to be a three star book for me.' I mean, I'm getting near the end of the story and I'm crying. But then, BUT THEN, holy cow, I can't believe how this book is turning around! The ending! Oh my god! Even as I'm reading the ending, I'm thinking I know there's a book two but I am not going to read it yet. Soon. AND THEN I read the final pages of the book. Un-be-liev-a-ble. I want to start the next book now. Right now. This author has some mad writing skills.
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Great twist

I read a lot of reviews on other books by Stacey Jay that mentioned this book and disliking it. I was surprised. I've read a number of her books now and have not been disappointed, so I decided to give this one a try despite the negative feedback. I didn't enjoy this one quite as much as the others, but it was still an engaging read and a fun twist on the Romeo and Juliet story, one that doesn't end with them making a heartbreaking and stupid decision at the end. Like all of her stories, I thought characters and plot and setting were intertwined well and the romance was just as good. I think a recent reviewer got it right that Jay just tried to pack a bit too much into the end of this book, but it was still enjoyable.
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It was fun!!!

Honestly, I REALLY enjoyed this book. From the beginning to end it was fun. I love the characters they made Romeo and Juilet become. And the characters they introduced you to. I couldn't put it down. I don't normally read any kind of romance novels, but this was such a twist on the classic story that I fell for it.
I recommend this book if you love fun. I wasn't disappointed with it at all.

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A Twisted Retelling of Romeo and Juliet

Juliet Immortal gives us a twisted version of the story of Romeo and Juliet. Apparently Romeo was actually the one who murdered his new bride, Juliet, in order to gain immortality.

So Romeo becomes a Mercenary and Juliet is also granted immortality as an Ambassador of Light. They stand on the two sides of what has become a war zone: the love between soulmates.

Romeo’s task is to drive a wedge between the soulmates and cause one to sacrifice the other for the promise of immortality. Juliet’s task is to prevent that from happening. She is to fight for the love between the soulmates to stay strong.

Through it all, Romeo and Juliet are now enemies. We see Juliet making mistakes so similar to the mistakes she makes in Shakespeare’s play. Romeo is manipulative, turning any situation to whatever he wants and still using Juliet.

While this will never be a favorite read, it was intriguing the way the story of Romeo and Juliet was reinterpreted. The plot was entertaining, for the most part, with twists I didn’t necessarily see coming.

There were times when I just wanted to slap Juliet to make her actually pay attention to what was happening. Seriously, abusive best friends are not the way to go!

If you decide to give Juliet Immortal a read, let me know how you liked it. If you’ve already read it, please share as I am interested to see what others think.

This review first appeared at Orandi et Legendi (...).
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Good twist on an old classic.

I read this book myself a few years ago and I really enjoyed it back then. I haven't read it recently, so I can't say much about the story. I would have to read it again to see if I still enjoy it, but it's a nice twist on the original story we read in school. I bought this book for my sister for her birthday, along with the companion book, and she loved them both.
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A Very Unique and Interesting Take on the Classic Tragic Love Story

I am a sucker for anything Romeo & Juliet. It’s tragic, but my warped sense of everything finds it tragically romantic. I’m also a sucker for retellings (as you probably already know) and Juliet Immortal by Stacey Jay modernizes and retells that classic story in a very unexpected and awesome way.

Jay exploits the tragedy in the traditional love story, pitting Juliet and Romeo against each other, one representing the Light and the other the Dark, one desperately trying to save pairs of soul mates while the other will do anything to destroy these examples of true love.

What a unique and exciting idea! I love when a book gives me something new that I haven’t really seen much of before. It’s fresh, it keeps me on my toes and it keeps me wanting more, more, more.

Jay turns Juliet and Romeo into complex characters, dealing with things far deeper than their traditional love story. We see a lot of our favourite b-characters from that story make an appearance as well, which adds to the overall feel of this modern story.

I wasn’t expecting much getting into this, I figured it would just be a typical retelling, but it was definitely much different than I would have thought and I really appreciate that take on a classic story that has been retold to death.

Originally posted on citygirlscapes.com