The Shadow Cabinet (The Shades of London)
The Shadow Cabinet (The Shades of London) book cover

The Shadow Cabinet (The Shades of London)

Hardcover – February 10, 2015

Price
$27.09
Format
Hardcover
Pages
384
Publisher
G.P. Putnam's Sons Books for Young Readers
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0399256622
Dimensions
5.75 x 1.25 x 8.5 inches
Weight
1.06 pounds

Description

From School Library Journal Gr 9 Up—This latest series installment picks up right after the events in The Madness Underneath (Putnam, 2014)—the leader of the ghost police squad, Stephen, has just died. Rory was holding his hand, believing that her touch could keep his ghost nearby, but it's nowhere to be found and she's starting to despair. Then his body disappears. Meanwhile, Rory's classmate Charlotte has been kidnapped by their shared therapist, Jane, who turns out to have a colorful past as a member of a cult obsessed with the Eleusinian Mysteries, mystic rites that blur the lines between life and death. Johnson introduces new villains and expands her world's mythology as Rory, Callum, and Boo try to rescue Charlotte, navigate the Stephen situation, and eventually get caught up in saving the world. Enough background is given that the book could work as a stand-alone, but that would mean readers would be denying themselves the pleasure of the first two titles. Heavily laced with humor and genuine creepiness, this well-crafted thriller is a winner.—Stephanie Klose, Library Journal Praise for Maureen Johnson’s The Shadow Cabinet : A Spring 2015 Kids’ Indie Next Pick! “Creepy, tense and wonderful: Don't expect to put this down once it's begun—but be sure to begin with The Name of the Star.”— Kirkus Reviews , starred review “The plot…is among Johnson’s finest and incorporates creepy bits of backstory, fascinating historical asides, and truly ghoulish side characters.”— Booklist “Heavily laced with humor and genuine creepiness, this well-crafted thriller is a winner.”— School Library Journal Maureen Johnson (www.maureenjohnsonbooks.com) is the author of nine young adult novels, and is contributor to two short story collections, including the New York Times bestselling Let It Snow . Maureen lives in New York City.xa0Follow her on Twitter @maureenjohnson. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. The room was full of a soft December-morning light, a kind of gentle dove-gray color. Stephen was on the bed. Glasses off. Peaceful. Outside, London rumbled by as it always did and presumably always would.“Rory, are you sure?” Thorpe said. “Are you sure it worked?”It was just me, Boo, and Thorpe now. Thorpe was our overseer from MI5, someone I knew very little about except that he was young with white hair. Stephen had always been the one to deal with Thorpe, and Thorpe would make things happen. Security systems would be shut down, records altered, CCTV footage obtained, door opened. But Thorpe did not have our ability, our sight, and there was nothing he could do about what was happening now, in this hospital room. Callum was gone—he had stormed out when he realized what I had done. Or, what I thought I’d done. It wasn’t like I’d made a choice. There had simply been no time to think of what it all meant. Stephen had been dead for four minutes.“I know he’s here,” Boo was saying. “We need to start looking. We do the hospital. We do the flat, both the old one and the new one. And if that fails, we come back here and we do it again. Yeah?”I’d grabbed Stephen’s hand and hadn’t let go. I was a terminus, and if my theory was right, I had the power to pull him back—not to stop him from dying, but to make him a ghost.“I mean . . .” Boo paced the side of the bed by the door, unable to remain still. “When Jo woke up, she woke up where she died. Most of them, we find them where they died. Not all of them, but most of them. A lot of them, anyway. Maybe we need to stay here. Or at least look around the hospital. But here? He’d probably come here? I mean, I think it can take a while sometimes?” No one was listening to Boo.“Do you know anything?” she asked me, her voice pitching high. “Did you feel something, or . . . ”It took me a moment to shake myself out of my haze and realize I was supposed to answer.“I don’t know,” I said.“Rory, try. Try .”“Is that a thing?” Thorpe asked. “Can you . . . feel them?”“ Rory ,” Boo said.She had broken the seal on my calm, and I felt a surge run through me. I saw it coming, like a big, flat wave off the shoreline, a wall of water about to crash down and take me away forever. I was not going to let that happen.“Shut up !” I yelled across the bed. “Let me think .”I had no idea what I was doing. I tried to remember what it was like in those last moments, when they’d told me he was dying, when I’d closed my eyes like this and taken his hand. So I did that. I grabbed his hand, which was warm, but not as warm as it should have been. It was Stephen’s hand, the one I had felt on my face last night, on the space under my shirt, along my belly where my scar was. When we had kissed. My eyes were closed then too.No muscle movement. His hand was an inanimate object. I squeezed harder. I tightened my eyes until starbursts appeared behind them. Stephen. Where are you? Where are you? Where are you? He had sighed into my mouth when we kissed. Where are you where are you where are you . . . There was no answer, no clear echo in my head, no hand gripping mine. I went harder, pushing into my own mind, recalling the very moments before, when it had all happened and his life support had been turned off. There was the whiteness, the rushing feeling, a pushing and a pulling, and a feeling of falling—Suddenly, in my mind, I was back in Louisiana, standing in my uncle Bick’s bird shop, A Bird in Hand. I was imagining this, of course, but my mind had landed there quite naturally. Uncle Bick was behind the counter in his Tulane baseball cap, sorting a bunch of bird toys. I could smell birdseed.The birds were allowed to fly free in the shop (he had a series of three doors you came through to make sure they were safe), so there was always a chance that a bird would land on your head. Or, more likely, bird poop would land on your head. I was always a little nervous in there. It never fazed Uncle Bick. Birds almost never pooped on him.“Here’s the thing,” said the Uncle Bick in my head, “they actually want to be found. They’re not designed for the wild.”He was talking about parakeets. Uncle Bick had a passion for finding the ones that were lost or released by callous college students, who regarded them as a school-year pet. They sat in the local trees, deeply confused by their situation. My uncle Bick drove around in his truck and rescued them (and got labeled a possible predator by the university security department for lingering by dorm room windows).Except of course this wasn’t about parakeets. My brain was filtering information, and this was the format it had chosen.“So how do I find him?” I asked Imaginary Uncle Bick. He pushed the box aside and adjusted his baseball cap.“Parakeets never go far,” he said. “They’re not used to long flights or heights. They stick close to home. They never meant to leave.”“I’m honestly not sure if I should be talking to you,” I said to my imaginary uncle. “I’m trying to find Stephen.”“And I’m not your uncle,” said my imaginary uncle. “I’m your own head, telling you what you already know.”“What does that mean? I don’t know anything. ”“Oh,” said my own brain, “you do.” Read more

Features & Highlights

  • The thrilling third installment to the Edgar-nominated, bestselling series Rory and her friends are reeling from a series of sudden and tragic events. While racked with grief, Rory tries to determine if she acted in time to save a member of the squad. If she did, how do you find a ghost? Also, Rory’s classmate Charlotte has been kidnapped by Jane and her nefarious organization. Evidence is uncovered of a forty-year-old cult, ten missing teenagers, and a likely mass murder. Everything indicates that Charlotte’s in danger, and it seems that something much bigger and much more terrible is coming.Time is running out as Rory fights to find her friends and the ghost squad struggles to stop Jane from unleashing her spectral nightmare on the entire city. In the process, they’ll discover the existence of an organization that underpins London itself—and Rory will learn that someone she trusts has been keeping a tremendous secret.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(343)
★★★★
25%
(143)
★★★
15%
(86)
★★
7%
(40)
-7%
(-40)

Most Helpful Reviews

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3 1/2 Stars...

The Shadow Cabinet is the third book the Shades of London series. I was very anxious to see how things would play out with this one.

***HUGE SPOILER BELOW IF YOU HAVE NOT READ THE SECOND BOOK!!!***

I didn’t really like how the second book ended. Stephen dying really through me for a loop and I did not see it coming. I kept thinking, how could she end it like that?!?? So when The Shadow Cabinet begins, it basically picks up pretty much where the story ended in book two. Everyone is in the hospital with Stephen, mourning over his loss when Rory makes a desperate attempt to bring back him as a ghost. Not to mention Rory’s classmate is still missing and she is possibly in danger.
Because of everything that has happened to Rory, her and the team are secluded; more so Rory than anyone else. Callum and Boo attempt to go around town to see if what Rory did actually worked and Stephen became a ghost. Rory is not one to wait around wringing her hands, so naturally she goes out and tries to find some answers for herself. Which leads to some interesting and unexpected results.
The Shadow Cabinet starts off a little slow for me. Nothing major seemed to happen until almost halfway through the book. It wasn’t a struggle to get through the book though. I wanted to see how things resolved and find out the why behind them.

This wasn’t my favorite book out of the trio….The Madness Underneath is my favorite, but The Shadow Cabinet was still enjoyable. I am curious what exactly this mysterious groups needs from Rory and how major a part she will play in it. And what is up with those weird and creepy twins? I was curious, but never a big fan of stories involving ghosts and people seeing ghosts before, however Maureen Johnson has made me one. I am looking forward to her announcement of book four.
3 people found this helpful
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A bit boring, especially to start

A bit boring, especially to start. There was so much setting up in the first 1/3 of the book, I started wondering if I was reading the same series. I found myself turning back to the first 2 to see if I missed something. Many scenes were sort of dragged out and I was just wanting them to be over, not seeing the connection to the big picture. I loved the first book, enjoyed the second and struggled with this one. If you want to muscle through the series, read this, but I am not sure I will continue reading after this book.
2 people found this helpful
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Shades of London moves to an epic new level!

The book starts with a sinister prologue set in the 1970s, which sets the dark tone for the rest of the story, followed by the immediate aftermath of the devastating events that happened at the end of the second novel, The Madness Underneath; Rory has run away from school, Charlotte has been kidnapped by Jane, and Stephen... well, he may be gone forever.

It's a chaotic starting point for a book but it does ensure that there is no lack of action or excitement within those first few chapters. And in truth, it never really dies down for the duration of the novel; it's a roller-coaster ride that will toy with the reader's emotions while at rapid speed unveiling an entirely new dimension to the world so cleverly crafted by Maureen Johnson.

Because I read the first book in the series, The Name of the Star, over three years ago and the second one nearly two years ago it took me a little while to get back into the story and the ghost-infused world it is set in. I didn't clearly remember what had happened previously, or even who all the characters were, which made for a confusing beginning to my reading journey. I could have done with a quick catch-up at the start, but that may just be because I'm getting forgetful in my old age!

Once the previous events came back to me though I was quickly absorbed into this hugely exciting tale, which moved the story of Rory and the Shades to an entirely new and much more epic level than ever before. There were particularly intriguing developments with Thorpe and a link to the sinister prologue, which brought the entire series to date full-circle. I loved the idea behind The Shadow Cabinet (not to be confused with the real life government institution), which was super fascinating in a conspiracy-theory kind of way and opened up the world of the Shades to many more exciting developments down the line.

While The Shadow Cabinet is very much a 'middle' book in a series – it'd be difficult for those who haven't read the previous novels to pick this one up and understand what's going on – for fans of Shades of London the third instalment is a real treat with great character and story development and opening up Maureen Johnson's already epic world to a whole slew of new possibilities. I for one cannot wait to see where she's taking the Shades next!
1 people found this helpful
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One Of The Best Books Out There

Maureen Johnson has yet to disappoint me with any of the Shades of London books. They are a great read. This has got to be my favorite of all three of the books so far. There was never a moment when I struggled to keep interest in the book. It is magnificently written. It is full of surprising twists and I struggled to put the book down. This is a great set of books that I recommend to all my friends whenever they ask me for book suggestions.
1 people found this helpful
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Five Stars

very good story all together
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Five Stars

Good book
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Five Stars

Christmas gift
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4-5 stars

This book was nearly as good,as the first to parts. In my opinion it was just a little bit too confusing and too much of a new story. Besides that I still love the characters and I am looking forward to the next part of this series.
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I was pretty lukewarm on the Book #2 but I liked this ...

I was pretty lukewarm on the Book #2 but I liked this one a lot. That said, I assumed this was the final book in the series so I wasn't really emotionally prepared when the book ended as open as it did. But I'll absolutely read the next one!
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Worth the wait!

"We were all afraid of the thing in front of us, and the reality of who we were fell on me all at once. None of us were fearless— we were four people too young to be doing this."

Simply put this book was everything I hoped for and more. So many questions got answered and so many things happened. I think this might be my favorite book of the series so far. I cant believe we have to wait over a year for the next one. I need the next one NOW!!