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Liesl & Po
Liesl & Po
Liesl & Po
Ebook260 pages3 hours

Liesl & Po

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

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About this ebook

From New York Times bestselling author Lauren Oliver comes a luminous novel that glows with rare magic, ghostly wonders, and a true friendship that lights even the darkest of places. An E. B. White Read-Aloud Honor Book, it’s perfect for fans of the author’s other middle grade novels: The Spindlers and the Curiosity House series.

Liesl lives in a tiny attic bedroom, locked away by her cruel stepmother. Her only friends are the shadows and the mice—until one night a ghost named Po appears from the darkness.

That same evening, an alchemist's apprentice named Will makes an innocent mistake that has tremendous consequences for Liesl and Po, and it draws the three of them together on an extraordinary journey.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherHarperCollins
Release dateOct 4, 2011
ISBN9780062093356
Author

Lauren Oliver

Lauren Oliver is the cofounder of media and content development company Glasstown Entertainment, where she serves as the President of Production. She is also the New York Times bestselling author of the YA novels Replica, Vanishing Girls, Panic, and the Delirium trilogy: Delirium, Pandemonium, and Requiem, which have been translated into more than thirty languages. The film rights to both Replica and Lauren's bestselling first novel, Before I Fall, were acquired by Awesomeness Films. Before I Fall was adapted into a major motion picture starring Zoey Deutch. It debuted at the Sundance Film Festival in 2017, garnering a wide release from Open Road Films that year. Oliver is a 2012 E. B. White Read-Aloud Award nominee for her middle-grade novel Liesl & Po, as well as author of the middle-grade fantasy novel The Spindlers and The Curiosity House series, co-written with H.C. Chester. She has written one novel for adults, Rooms. Oliver co-founded Glasstown Entertainment with poet and author Lexa Hillyer. Since 2010, the company has developed and sold more than fifty-five novels for adults, young adults, and middle-grade readers. Some of its recent titles include the New York Times bestseller Everless, by Sara Holland; the critically acclaimed Bonfire, authored by the actress Krysten Ritter; and The Hunger by Alma Katsu, which received multiple starred reviews and was praised by Stephen King as “disturbing, hard to put down” and “not recommended…after dark.” Oliver is a narrative consultant for Illumination Entertainment and is writing features and TV shows for a number of production companies and studios. Oliver received an academic scholarship to the University of Chicago, where she was elected Phi Beta Kappa. She received a Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing from New York University. www.laurenoliverbooks.com.

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Rating: 3.9790077480916035 out of 5 stars
4/5

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I got an advanced copy of this book for review from the publisher. It was a wonderful book, beautiful and poignant, I enjoyed it a lot. The advanced reading copy itself is one of the nicest I have ever received with beautiful embossing, raw page egdes, and wonderful pictures.Liesl is locked in the attic by her evil stepmother after her father dies. Her only friends are her drawings; that is until a ghost named Po appears and helps her to escape. Little does Lisle know that her escape entwines her fate with the fate of a boy named Will. Will is an alcemist's apprentice and has accidentally mixed up the box containing Liesl's father's ashes and a box containing the greatest magic ever made. Liesl is on a quest to bury her father's ashes at their old country home, but unknowingly is carrying around a great magic. Will, Po, and Liesl will end up on a great adventure, dodging danger, and learning how to live and how to say good-bye to those who we have lost.This was an excellent book. It takes place in Victorian times and has that dark tone to it; it's been many years since anyone has seen the sun. The pictures reflect this and are absolutely beautiful; they add a lot to this story. Lauren Oliver has a forward in this book talking about how she wrote this after a good friend's death, that definitely reflects in the story. Liesl is struggling with her father's death and much of this story touches on how we can let go of someone we loved so much and how to say good-bye. It also asks questions about what happens after death.Liesl is an excellent character; she is so accepting of her situation as horrible as it is. When an opportunity presents itself to escape though, she goes for it and embarks on a wonderful adventure. Po and his pet, Bundle, are mysterious and interesting characters...they are both neither female or male they just are. I love how Liesl's and Will's stories weave in and out of each other and eventually entwine, the plot is cleverly done and makes the book hard to put down. I read this book in one night; I just couldn't stop.There is a lot of a fairy tale feel to this book too; Liesl has an evil stepmother, there are mix-ups of boxes, and magic is unleashed upon the world. I love how Liesl accepting her father's death also relates to the box of the most powerful magic in the world.The book ties up beautifully. It was a very good read. The only thing I wanted a bit more of was description so that I could really imagine the surroundings in my mind; but that's a small thing...overall I really enjoyed the story.Overall a beautiful and poignant story that is full of adventure and magic, but also touches on serious topics of death and what happens after death. The setting is bleak put there are points of hope and sunniness throughout. The characters will capture your heart and the plot is so engaging it makes the book impossible to put down. I can't wait to read some of Oliver's other books. She writes such a wide breadth of different types of books. I think anyone who enjoys historical fantasties age middle grade or older will enjoy this book. If you enjoy this book I would also recommend The Clockwork Three by Mathew Kirby, The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman, and The Tales of the Sinister City series by F.E. Higgins.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Quite ineffable. :)
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    A great read!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    So so wonderful.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I usually skip the forwards to books, but this one caught my attention and now I'm a little perplexed. I honestly don't know how I'd feel about Liesl & Po if I hadn't read the forward. Differently, for sure. Maybe I'd like it just as much. But reading the forward makes the book so much more poignant that even when I noticed something that might irritate me elsewhere - a heap of coincidences, for example - I didn't mind.

    Liesl & Po is pure and strange in the way of fairy tales, beautiful even when it's grim, bursting with wonder and deep feeling. The characters aren't fully fleshed but they're vibrantly alive, and the trio of protagonists - the titular Liesl & Po, as well as the alchemist's apprentice, Will - are darling and easy to root for.

    The book is about Liesl's journey to lay her father's ashes to rest by her mother's grave - except that, thanks to Will, she doesn't have her father's ashes. Unbeknownst to Liesl, she's carrying a box of very powerful magic. Things move along from there, with a whole crowd of people converging on the Red House, where the grave is located, all at once, and all wanting something. The story is simple but it contains some unexpected revelations - why did Liesl's stepmother lock her in the attic? What is this powerful magic, and how did the alchemist make it? Why is the Lady Premiere so upset by the smell of cabbage? Is Bundle the ghost a dog or a cat?

    The book has some unexpected humor as well. Po's grumpiness can be hilarious. One side-effect of the tragic loss of sunlight in Liesl & Po's world is that most crops won't grow, leaving people to subsist on potatoes...which is pretty grim, yes, but I still laughed every time I read about eating a potato donut.

    This is a marvelous book, highly recommended for young readers and for adults who want to feel young.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    What a supremely imaginative, delightful story! It is very rare that you come across full length novels that remind you of stories you remember as a child. For me, "Leisl & Po" is one of those stories that will live on in your memory for years to come.After reading the book and Lauren Oliver's reasons for having written it, I have to say with as much loss as I have suffered of my own over the years, this book most certainly holds a place in my heart and always will. "Leisl & Po" is not just an exciting adventure but a book that gives one hope for a life beyond the existence we currently live in, while simultaneously providing hope that no matter how harsh this life can seem that there is still magic to be found if only we believe.My recommendation of this book comes extremely high, and I hope both young and old will obtain a copy and come to treasure it as well.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Very much the kind of feeling and experience as Tuesdays At The Castle. Although not at all the same style or type of story the limited comment would still apply.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This was a very sweet read. I had downloaded a sample, and it hadn't moved me to buy. Right now, though, the e-book is $1.99, so I decided to give it a try. Glad I did!
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Background: Liesl is a young girl locked away in an attic by her evil stepmother, and to make matters worse her father has recently passed away. One day Liesl meets Po and Bundle, ghost that have come to visit her in the attic and they begin an incredible journey to return her fathers ashed to where he would like to rest forever.While Liesl is locked up, Will is an orphan boy recent adopted by an alchemist. Will is the "apprentice" which really just means that he does all the jobs and deliveries and gets called useless all day and night.Eventually Liesl and Will's stories intertwine and together with Po and Bundle they have a very interesting series of days.Review: I received this as an Audiobook from Random House, and was very happy to have chosen it as one of my books to review. Liesl and Po was delightful to listen to and the reader was wonderful. I think my favorite was him doing an old woman sneezing... anywho... The story was well thought out and who doesn't love a happy ending, but I can only say that I just "liked" it not really liked it or loved it.The plot was nicely thought out, the kids making their ways toward each other slowly; and the characters- all of them- were entertaining in their own ways. But more often than not, I found myself questioning things and wondering why there were so many nasty people all thrown at these poor little kids.From what I understand, this was written to cope with loss and you can definitely tell that, but it also makes the reader think a lot about loss and that can be a little depressing.I did enjoy this book, it was fun and kept me wanting to know what would happen to Liesl, Will, and Po next.I think for a young audience this would be fitting, as hopefully, they have not experienced too much loss yet, so they won't be depressed to think about it. Or for those who need a pick me up about finding friends when you need them
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    This was my second attempt at Liesl & Po. Earlier, I abandoned it after just a chapter or two, but Wendy gently reminded me that she had recommended it. So I dutifully got it from the library again, and this time I read the whole thing.

    It didn't work very well for me, though I did tear up at the end, because, well, who wouldn't? I was most charmed by the ghost and the ghostly pet. The adults were all cut from cardboard. The worldbuilding was lacking, in my eyes. Why did the alchemist have the power to basically turn the sun off with his magic but he was otherwise incompetent and bumbling? I know it's a middle-grade novel, skimping on the background details isn't unheard of, and stupid/mean adults are common- but I came away with no real understanding of the motivating force behind Will, no good reasons for some of his actions. The plot, for all the elements of freshness (and there were several) was far too predictable and pat.

    The part I liked best was the Author's Note, and after I read it, I did find myself liking the book more because of it. The Author's Note brought it from a one star book to a two star book for me.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A beautifully written, charming and magical story.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I really liked this younger adult story of a girl and her ghostly best friend. I listened to the audio for this because I think Jim Dale is a wonderful narrator, and I wasn't disappointed at all. I did also look at the paper copy of the book because the illustrations are lauded, and they did add to the text.In a way, Lauren Oliver turns some fairy tale tropes on their ears, by not using them in the way you would expect by the end. After all, Liesl is a stepdaughter whose father has died and whose stepmother locks her in an attic. Will is an abused apprentice of a cruel master. These are stereotypes that could have been cliche but were not. The addition of Po was a cool aspect of the story.Mo was my favorite character, with his big heart of gold. His role throughout was refreshing, funny, and sweet. He really helped pull the story together.I always like books that bring disparate characters together in the end, linking up everyone like the characters in a Dickens novel, and Liesl & Po did just that. While the ending may be considered a bit trite, with everyone getting his or her dues, it is obviously not a complex adult novel that doesn't deserve a happy ending.I think anyone would like to read or listen to this sweet story, especially with its happy ending.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Loved it! The drawings are incredible and the plot just keeps you reading. I didn't want to put this book down once I had started it and hope that Lauren continues to write many more as well as this one!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Liesl & Po is Lauren Oliver’s charming middle-grade debut. I have greatly loved this author’s YA books, and though each book is vastly different, her wonderful storytelling is consistent. Ms. Oliver always manages to surprise and impress me with the emotional depth of her characters. Liesl & Po is no different and I enjoyed the dark, magical ghost story feel to it and all the whimsical characters. This deeply personal story is inspired by the death of the author’s best friend, and is something that haunted the pages as I read the book. I think many will be able to relate to the subject matter, and will enjoy the fantasy elements involved as well. To use Liesl’s favorite word, I enjoyed the story ineffably much.

    Like a fairy tale, the story begins with Liesl, a young girl who has been locked in an attic by her evil stepmother. Her father has recently died, and now she’s on her own, drawing pictures in the attic. One night a ghost named Po and his ghostly pet Bundle pop in and she asks for Po’s help to find her father on the Other Side. Meanwhile, a young alchemist’s apprentice named Will is sent on an errand to deliver a powerful box of magic, but mistakenly delivers the wrong box. This mix up sets off a sequence of events that brings the story full circle for this eccentric group of characters, and they must go on a journey to make things right.

    The story takes place in a bleak, undetermined place where food and money are scarce. The mood is dark, and the setting is literally dark, as the sun hasn’t shone for years. But there is a ray of hope in the characters as they work together to help each other along the way. Liesl is courageous, determined and hopeful, even though she has suffered so much in her young life. Po is a ghost of few words, and is someone who needs Liesl as much as she needs him. The ghostly cat/dog Bundle is adorable too and always there to chime in with a “Mwark”. And young Will is sweet in his obvious affection for Liesl. There are many lighthearted moments between the characters that keep the story from ever being too heavy.

    The story is magical and endearing, and the fantasy elements make it easy to imagine it as a movie. Though the subject matter is dark, the touching alliance of the characters brings a ray of hope. The illustrations by Kei Acedara are gorgeous and complement the story perfectly. Recommended for fans of Lauren Oliver’s writing and those that enjoy middle grade and fantasy books. An enchanting read.

  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This one was okay. Oliver is a very gifted prose writer, but I have felt let down by each of her books since Before I Fall.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I wanted to love this book, and as a child I'm pretty sure I would have loved this book, but as a cynical adult I only liked it. I liked the fairy tale, magical feeling of the book. I liked the writing. I disliked that the adults in the story were all so evil, with the exception of Mo who was really just an adult child. Couldn't we have had SOME adults that were not pure evil? I found it distracting to have Po always referred to as "it". I understand the reason behind it, but it kind of threw me every time. I loved the illustrations in the book, they were beautiful and mystical and magical. However, I think my favorite thing about Liesl & Po was the author's note at the end. Particularly this paragraph:"... Liesl & Po is the embodiment of what writing has always been for me at its purest and most basic - not a paycheck, certainly; not an idea, even; and not an escape. Actually, it is the opposite of an escape; it is a way back in , a way to enter and make sense of a world that occasionally seems harsh and terrible and mystifying."I'm glad I have this book in my library and I hope many of my students read it. I'm sure they will love it.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Such a beautiful and poignant story. I'm glad that I read the hard copy and didn't listen to the audio version, because Kei Acedera's illustrations really enhance Oliver's dreamy tone. And Lauren Oliver's note at the end about her heartbreaking inspiration for the story and how personal it is to her brings a whole new depth. This book was a treat that I'd saved for Christmas break because I didn't want the distractions and busy-ness of school to get in the way, and I'm so glad I did... it's truly a story to curl up with and savor.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    i wanted to read this book so much, i actually bought it. i should have waited. after reading the night circus and tne girl who circumnavigated fairyland, i was ready for another story that swept me into another story and another world. i didnt get that. its a good story but it wasnt as good as i expected so id have to say i was disappointed. i would recommend it for its target audience, nothing more. oh, i did like the illustrations.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Review courtesy of Dark Faerie Tales.Quick & Dirty: Take a bunch of unique characters that really have nothing in common and put them together in a fun magical setting, this is what you get with Liesl & Po. I loved this book it was so cute and beautifully written. It is a great read for all ages young and old.Opening Sentence: She was lying in bed in the uniform gray dress of her small attic room when in one corner the shadows seemed to crimp, or flex, and suddenly standing next to her wobbly desk and three-legged chair was a person about her height.The Review: Liesl is a young girl that lives in an attic. Her father recently died and her stepmother is a mean woman who wouldn’t let Liesl say goodbye before it was too late. She misses her father greatly, and the life she had before he got sick. She is a sweet young thing that loves to draw, and tries to make the best with what she has. She gets lonely all by herself in her attic, but she soon makes a new friend. Po is a ghost that resides on the other side. It is neither boy nor girl because these things don’t matter on the other side. It finds itself drawn to a light that is filled with a little girl in the living world. Po doesn’t really remember anything much about the living; it has been on the other side far too long. But then Po meets Liesl and life starts to have meaning again. Liesl asks Po for help in finding her father and helping him to rest peacefully. This takes them on an unexpected adventure filled with magic, danger, and new friends.Meanwhile, Will is a young boy that lives with the mean old alchemist. Will is an orphan and a while back the alchemist adopted him and has tried to make him his apprentice. Will runs errands and tasks all day. One night he happens to notice a light on in a high window of a big house. In this room he sees a beautiful young girl. Ever since that night he has tried to return to that house everyday in hopes to see her again. Tonight Will is on an important mission to deliver a very important package to a very important person, but for the last few nights the girl has been absent from her window. So instead of delivering the package right away like he was ordered, he takes a different route that will bring him by the girls window once again. This leads to a string of events that start a journey that he was expecting.I loved this book. It is a really fun book that has unique characters, magical adventure, and is written so beautifully. The story is enchanting and you can’t help but start to reminisce your own childhood while reading it. There are only a handful of characters in the story but they all play an integral part to the plot. Lauren Oliver weaves a beautiful tale of adventure and loss, which is hard to put down. There are cute illustrations throughout the book that help your imagination start to flow. It is really hard to put into words how much I enjoyed this book, it was that good. So if you have a child that loves to read or you yourself are looking for a fun read, I would highly recommend Liesl & Po to everyone.Notable Scene:Train 128 steamed past the blurry gray countryside, past cracked and blackened fields.Will pressed his nose to the window.Liesl tucked her chin to her knees and slept.Bundle watched over Liesl.Po was a shadow on the wall, unmoving.The old lady with the cane finished searching all the passenger cars, then berated the policeman for letting the crazy little girl with the wooden box get away.Mo, drinking hot chocolate and reading the paper, sat contentedly on an express train to Cloverstown, where he intended to intercept train 128.Lefty licked dribbles of chocolate from Mo’s beard with a small pink tongue.The alchemist and the Lady Premiere arrived at the gates of 31 Highland Avenue, where they had determined the magic had been taken by mistake.A black-haired thief on his way to Gainsville stole two silver pieces from the grave of a dead man.Time ticked forward. Stars collided. Planets were born and died. Everywhere and in every fold and bend of the universe, strange and miraculous things happened.And so it was, just then.FTC Advisory: Harper Collins provided me with a copy of Liesl & Po. No goody bags, sponsorships, “material connections,” or bribes were exchanged for my review.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This was a very satisfying book to read. The ending in particular, made me happy. This book made me think about what it would be like to be a ghost. I liked this book because it was similar to A LITTLE PRINCESS. I love books where a poor neglected girl succeeds.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Liesl is a young girl, trapped in an attic room by a nasty stepmother. One night she is visited by a ghost named Po. A relationship blossoms, something they both desperately need to move forward in their unusual lives.Will is a hapless and lonely, young apprentice, working for a wicked alchemist. He makes a serious mistake in one of his deliveries, setting him on a course that will change his life forever.How these three meet, is how this lovely fairy-tale progresses. It’s filled with charm, excitement and old-fashioned adventure, that will leave you grinning and cheering this rag-tag trio on. There’s a bit Harry Potter, mixed with a healthy dose of Neil Gaiman. And Oliver’s prose sings:“She liked that word: we. It sounded warm and open, like a hug.” “People could push and pull at you, and poke you, and probe as deep as they could go. They could even tear you apart, bit by bit. But at the heart and root and soul of you, something would remain untouched.” Okay, this is simple: Find a copy and read it! See, that wasn’t hard.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Liesl lives in an attic, locked away by her greedy stepmother after Liesl’s father passed away. Unable to go outside, Liesl spends her time sitting at her desk, drawing pictures and wishing she could see her father again. Unbeknownst to Liesl, she has a secret admirer. Young Will, an alchemists assistant, watches her from the street, wondering who she is. One fateful night, not long after her father has passed away, Liesl is visited by a ghost named Po. Po isn’t sure if it’s a boy or girl, and unsure whether it’s pet is a cat or dog. They’ve lived on the other side so long, they’ve forgotten what they were. This same night, Will is sent by the alchemist to deliver the world’s most powerful magic to a client and to pick up some supplies from a man who also happens to be the localmortician. When Will mixes up the magic box with the box of Liesl’s father’s ashes, he sets off a chain of events that will take Liesl, Po and Will on a magical adventure.Ms. Oliver has once again crafted a totally engaging story, this time for young readers. The story had elements of Neil Gaiman’s The Graveyard Book, and is also similar in tone to many of Roald Dahl’s books. I couldn’t help but be reminded of the nasty aunts inJames & the Giant Peach whenever Augusta and Madame Premiere were in a scene. The mismatched cast of characters are odd and engaging, ranging from sweet and innocent to downright nasty. Kei Acedera’s beautiful drawings scattered amongst the pages help set the tone perfectly. Liesl & Po is full of magic, adventure and most of all love. This is a book that everyone young and old will enjoy. I can’t recommend it enough.(Review based on an ARC courtesy of the publisher)
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Really fun book!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I understand why this book was so well liked. A host of interesting characters, some evil, some helpfully good, a lonely young girl who grieves her father while she is alone in the attic where her nasty stepmother placed her. Then, she notices a shadow and next to that shadow is a cat or a dog figure accompanying the ghost with the name of Po.Pleading with Po to help her communicate with her father, Po agrees to try. Enter a nasty alchemist who also holds a young person hostage. Will happens to watch Liesel from her lonely attic window. He wonders is she might like him and find something special about him. Verbally, emotionally abused by adults, both Will and Leisel find a way to escape. Then, another near do well grown up known as "the lady premier," wants something that the alchemist had, but the magical box was lost by Oliver.A lot of characters, and a lot of action might lend for a confusing story, but the author is excellent with character development while rendering the story magical and mystical.This is an excellent YA book that appeals to young and older alike.Four Stars.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Let me first start off by saying that this is the first book I’ve read by Lauren Oliver. I’ve had “Delirium” sitting on my shelf to be read since its release day, but for some reason or another, I have yet to start it. After finishing “Liesl & Po”, however, her MG debut, I’m going to have to work on finding time to read “Delirium”.“Liesl & Po” is a fantastic MG novel. It’s about Liesl, a young girl forced to live in the attic by her stepmother after her father’s death. One night, Po and Bundle, both from the other side (ghosts), appear in the attic after noticing Liesl has stopped drawing. When Po tells her that it’ll try and locate her father on the other side, she promises to make him a drawing. Which brings us to Will, an orphan and the alchemist’s apprentice. On his way to make a delivery for the alchemist, Will stops to stare up at Liesl’s window. It’d been days since he’d seen her face in the window and he was starting to become alarmed, so he waits, hoping to see her face even though he’s running late with his delivery. When Liesl appears in the window, Will is elated. They don’t know each other, but Liesl is almost like a light that shines on his dark life. When Will accidentally mixes up the box containing the alchemist’s greatest power with a box full of ashes, he will set off on a journey that will lead him right to Liesl.The characters are wonderful. The illustrations that go along with the text allow the reader to easily envision what is taking place. Overall, this was a pleasant read and I’d recommend it to those looking for a great MG novel.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Liesl has been kept in the attic of her house ever since her father grew progressively sick and then died. Her stepmother Augusta hates her and keeps her there, feeding her meager meals and rarely allowing her to leave. Liesl draws to pass the time and does little else. Three days after her father’s death, she receives two unexpected visitors: a ghost named Po, who is neither a boy nor a girl, and his ghostly pet Bundle, who is neither a dog nor a cat. Po agrees to try to find her father on the other side in exchange for a drawing and discovers that her father wants to go home and only Liesl is left to undertake the journey. Liesl and Po’s journey will inevitably intertwine with Will’s. He’s an apprentice to a cruel alchemist and accidentally mixes up Liesl’s father’s ashes with the greatest magic ever created. Po and Liesl take this magic and embark on a wonderful and strange journey, with both friends and enemies following them, to take Liesl’s father to his proper resting place.Lauren Oliver opens the book with an explanation of the circumstances that led her to write the book: her best friend died and she wrote the book as way of coping with it. I can definitely see that reflected in the story and I feel that anyone who has lost a loved one can relate to it, not just children. Liesl’s situation locked in the attic of her own house is simply miserable and she goes through every robotically without any real excitement. Sunlight has also disappeared, leaving the world cold and gray. The lovely charcoal drawings illustrate this feeling wonderfully. This is a physical representation of Lauren Oliver’s own feelings in the months after her friend’s death. Liesl and Po’s journey to lay her father to rest is symbolic of anyone’s personal journey in accepting a death in their lives and saying goodbye to that person. I love that the setting and time period of the book is unspecified, so the reader can imagine it as wherever and whenever they like. Liesl and Po deals with death in a way that doesn’t talk down to children and acknowledges that children can (and have to) deal with death in their own lives. Although the tale is fairly dark, Lauren Oliver tempers it with humor, levity, magic, and unique characters. Liesl, Will, and Po’s unlikely friendship is delightful and they have their own very different personalities and states of being. They were all alone in the world and found solace in each other in the grayscale world they live in. Liesl is surprisingly creative and brave for a girl who unquestioningly stayed in the attic for so long. Po is an enigmatic being that seems to become more and more human as he stays in the living world. Will is an abused child and has insecurities as a result, but remains a good, loyal friend to Liesl. The other characters, namely the adults in the story besides Liesl’s father, are flat characters that are simply villainous. This aspect gives the story a fairy or folk tale feel that doesn’t take away from the story.I enjoyed Liesl and Po very much and found Lauren Oliver’s prose engaging and lyrical. Those who enjoyed Neil Gaiman’s Graveyard Book or Lemony Snicket’s Series of Unfortunate Events books would enjoy it as well.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Find this review and more at On The ShelfI received Liesl & Po as an ARC copy shortly after I saw a few others’ reviews on it. I found the cover very interesting and couldn’t wait to read it. Readers a little younger than teen are able to read this story and the voice of it is that of a rich fairytale. The story follows Liesl, a young girl who just lost her father and has been locked away in the attic by her awful stepmother. A pair of ghosts, Po and Bundle, appear to her and she becomes friends with them, they help her to escape the attic so she can take the ashes of her father to a resting place. What Liesl doesn’t know is that there has been a big mix up and the road to where she needs to go will be a very rocky one. This tale is a bit of a grim one, it deals with death, evil people, and cruelty, but the sun does come back out and it is a very good healing story. The characters are full of life and personality, even the little animal ghost, Bundle, has a wonderful personality. I especially liked the ending of the book; it was very beautiful and full of hope. The illustrations in the book provide a wonderful accompaniment to the words. At the very beginning, the author has a note where she says she wrote this story because of the sudden death of a friend of hers and never wrote it for the purpose of being published. I can say I am glad it was published and that she decided to share a story with us that started off just for her healing. Very enjoyable, quick read, hopeful ending, heart warming.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Love the story, and listening to Jim Dale read it aloud, of course. The ending was a bit...Eh....but the characters are wonderful and the psychology excellent.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Narrated by Jim Dale. A disparate set of characters and mishaps comes together around a box that holds magic and another that holds the ashes of Liesl's father. Conservative families will be concerned about the regular references to raising of the dead by the alchemist, not to mention magic, but when it actually comes time for the "dead" to rise, it is unexpectedly lovely and true. The incomparable Jim Dale imbues each character with distinct and amusing personality, making this a great listening experience for family car trips (unless you are an aforementioned conservative family).
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This was a cute book. Middle grade fantasy/paranormal. I can see how it is written for children 9-12 years old. I think my oldest might read it.Liesl is a little girl who has lost her parents and is kept in an attic by her step mother. Po is a ghost who begins to visit her. He has an animal named Bundle. Will is an orphan who works for an alchemist who has been trying to make magic (by stealing sunlight). Will admires Liesl from a far.Liesl's father dies and she wants to take his ashes to her childhood home to bury him. Po helps her escape. Will and Liesl meet up as she is trying to bring her father to his resting place and Will is trying to escape the alchemist because of a mistake he made while delivering something the alchemist has made.It is interesting how there are many characters introduced and eventually they all collide as part of the story towards the end.Oliver has, once again, done a great job with her writing.The one thing that bothered me about this book is the fact that you don't know exactly what year it's set in. It almost seems steampunk in a way, but it's never actually stated that it is in the 1800s or early 1900s. Yet the clothing description reminds me of these times.I give the book a 4/5.

Book preview

Liesl & Po - Lauren Oliver

Part I

Attics & Accidents

Chapter One

ON THE THIRD NIGHT AFTER THE DAY HER FATHER DIED, LIESL SAW THE GHOST.

She was lying in bed in the uniform gray darkness of her small attic room when in one corner the shadows seemed to crimp, or flex, and suddenly standing next to her wobbly desk and three-legged chair was a person about her height. It was as though the darkness was a sheet of raw cookie dough and someone had just taken a cookie cutter and made a child-sized shape out of it.

Liesl sat up, alarmed.

What are you? she whispered into the darkness, even though she knew it was a ghost. Normal people do not appear out of darkness, nor seem to be made of liquid shadow. Besides, she had read about ghosts. She read a lot in her little attic room. There was not much else to do.

Po, the ghost said. My name is Po.

Where did you come from? Liesl asked.

From the Other Side, the ghost said, as though it were obvious, as though he were saying from downstairs, or from Oak Street, or some other place she knew.

Are you a girl or a boy? Liesl was wearing the same thin nightshirt she had been wearing since Tuesday, when her father died, and it occurred to her that if the ghost was a boy, she should cover up.

Neither, the ghost replied.

Liesl was startled. You have to be one or the other.

I don’t have to be anything, the ghost replied, sounding irritated. I am what I am and that’s all. Things are different on the Other Side, you know. Things are . . . blurrier.

But what did you used to be? Liesl pressed. "You know . . . before?"

Po stared at Liesl for a while. At least, she thought the ghost stared at her. It didn’t really have eyes, exactly. Just two folds of even deeper darkness where its eyes might be.

I don’t remember, it said finally.

Oh, Liesl said. Next to Po, an even smaller portion of darkness seemed to crimp and flex, and then there was a noise in the corner, a cross between the meow of a cat and the yip of a small dog. "And what’s that?" Liesl asked.

Po looked toward the place where its feet had once been. That’s Bundle.

Liesl sat forward. She had never had any kind of pet, not even when her father was alive and well, which was ages and ages ago, before he met Augusta, Liesl’s stepmother. Is it yours?

Nothing belongs to anyone on the Other Side, Po said. Liesl thought the ghost sounded superior. Then Po added, But Bundle comes with me wherever I go.

Is it a dog or a cat? The little ghost-pet was now making a kind of purring noise in the back of its throat. It slid silently across the room and stared up at Liesl. She could just make out a shaggy head of untrimmed shadow, and two pointed bits of darkness that could have been ears, and two stripes of pale silver moonlight that looked like eyes.

I told you, Po said, it isn’t one or the other. It’s just Bundle. On the Other Side—

Things are blurry, I know, Liesl cut in. She was quiet for a moment, and then seemed struck by an idea. Are you here to haunt me?

Of course not, Po said. Don’t be stupid. We have better things to do with our time. Po hated the impression that living people had of ghosts. It hated their idea that ghosts could find nothing better to do than hang around in basements and abandoned warehouses, jumping out at people.

The Other Side was a busy place—as busy, if not busier, than the Living Side. They ran parallel, the two worlds, like two mirrors sitting face-to-face, but normally Po was only dimly aware of the Living Side. It was a swirl of colors to the ghost’s left; a sudden explosion of sounds to its right; a dim impression of warmth and movement.

True, Po could move back and forth between sides, but it rarely chose to. In all the length of its death, Po had only been back once or twice. Why would it go to the Living Side more often? The Other Side was full of wraiths and shadows moving and jostling; and endless streams of dark water to swim in; and vast depths of cloudless night skies to fly in; and black stars that led into other parts of the universe.

Well, what are you doing in my room, then? Liesl demanded, folding her arms. She was annoyed that the ghost had called her stupid, and had decided that if Po was going to be difficult, she would be too.

The truth was that Po wasn’t exactly sure why it had appeared in Liesl’s room. (Bundle was there, of course, because Bundle went everywhere Po went.) Over the past few months Po had seen a dim light appear at the edges of its consciousness at the same time every night, and next to that light was a living one, a girl; and in the glow of that light the living girl made drawings. And then for three nights the light had not appeared, nor had the glow, nor had the drawings, and Po had been wondering why when—pop!—Po had been ejected from the Other Side like a cork popping out of a bottle.

Why did you stop drawing? Po asked.

Liesl had been temporarily distracted from thinking about her father. But now she remembered, and a heavy feeling came over her, and she lay back down in her bed.

Haven’t felt like it, she answered.

Po was suddenly at her bedside, just another shadow skating across her room.

Why?

Liesl sighed. My father is dead.

Po didn’t say anything.

Liesl went on, He was sick for a very long time. He was in the hospital.

Po still didn’t say anything. Bundle raised itself up on two hind legs of shadow and seemed to look at Liesl with its moonlight eyes.

Liesl added, My stepmother wouldn’t let me see him. She told me—she told me he did not want me to see him like that, sick. But I wouldn’t have minded. I just wanted to say good-bye. But I couldn’t, and I didn’t, and now I won’t ever see him again. Liesl felt a tremendous pressure pushing at the back of her throat, so she squeezed her eyes shut and spelled the word ineffable three times in her head, as she always did when she was trying not to cry.

Ineffable was her favorite word. When Liesl was very small, her father had often liked to sit and read to her: real grown-up books, with real grown-up words. Whenever they encountered a word she did not know, he would explain to her what it meant. Her father was very smart; a scientist, an inventor, and a university professor.

Liesl very clearly remembered one time at the willow tree, when he turned to her and said, Being here with you makes me ineffably happy, Lee-Lee. And she had asked what ineffable meant, and he had told her.

She liked the word ineffable because it meant a feeling so big or vast that it could not be expressed in words.

And yet, because it could not be expressed in words, people had invented a word to express it, and that made Liesl feel hopeful, somehow.

Why did you want to say good-bye to him? Po asked at last.

Liesl opened her eyes and stared. Because—because—that’s what you do when people are going away.

Po went silent again. Bundle coiled itself around the place Po’s ankles had once been.

People on the, um, Other Side don’t say good-bye? Liesl asked incredulously.

Po shook its shadow-head. They push. They mutter. Sometimes they sing. But they don’t say good-bye. It seemed to consider this for a second. They don’t say hello, either.

That seems very rude, Liesl said. "People always say hello to one another here. I don’t think I would like the Other Side."

The ghost in front of her flickered a bit around the shoulders, and Liesl assumed it was shrugging. It’s not that bad, Po said.

Suddenly Liesl sat up again excitedly, forgetting all about the tiny nightshirt she was wearing and the fact that Po was a maybe-boy. My father’s on the Other Side! she exclaimed. He must be there, with you! You could take him a message for me.

Po faded in and out uncertainly. Not all of the dead come this way.

Liesl’s heart dropped back into her stomach. What do you mean?

I mean . . . Po flipped slowly upside down, then righted itself. The ghost often did this when it thought. That some of them go straight on.

"On where?"

On. To other places. To Beyond. When it was irritated, the ghost became easier to see, as its silhouette flared somewhat along the edges. How should I know?

But do you think you could find out? Liesl sat up on her knees and stared at Po intently. Please? Could you just—could you just ask?

Maybe. Po did not want to get the girl’s hopes up. The Other Side was vast and filled with ghosts. Even on the Living Side, Po could still feel the Other Side expanding in all directions, had a sense of new people crossing over endlessly into its dark and twisting corridors. And people lost shapes quickly on the Other Side, and memories, too: They became blurry, as Po had said. They became a part of darkness, of the vast spaces between stars. They became like the invisible side of the moon.

But Po knew the girl wouldn’t understand any of this if it tried to explain, so it just said, Maybe. I can try.

Thank you!

I said I would try, that’s all. I didn’t say I could.

Still, thank you. Liesl felt hopeful for the first time since her father had died. It had been ever so long since anyone had tried to do anything for her—not since her father had been well, at least, before Augusta had decided that Liesl must move to the attic. And that was months upon months ago: a tower of months, so that when Liesl tried to remember her life before the attic, her memory grew slimmer and slimmer as though it was being stretched, and snapped before it could reach the ground.

Po was next to her. Then it was in the corner again, a person-shaped shadow with a curious shaggy shadow-pet at its feet. Bundle did the mew-bark thing. Liesl decided it sounded like a mwark.

You have to do something for me in return, Po said.

Okay, Liesl said, feeling uneasy. She did not know what she could possibly do for a ghost, especially since she was never allowed to leave the attic. It was, Augusta said, far too dangerous; the world was a terrible place, and would eat her up. What do you want?

A drawing, Po blurted, and then began to flicker again, this time from embarrassment. It was not used to having outbursts.

Liesl was relieved. I’ll draw you a train, she said passionately. She loved trains—the sound of them, at least. She heard their great horns blasting and the rattle of their wheels on the track and listened to them wailing farther and farther away, like birds calling to one another in the distance, and sometimes she confused the two sounds and imagined the train had wings that might carry its passengers up into the sky.

Po did not say anything. It seemed to pour itself into the regular corner shadows. All at once it blended in with Bundle’s shadow, and then with the shadow of the crooked desk, and three-legged stool.

Liesl sighed. She was alone again.

Then Po’s silhouette pulled itself abruptly away from the corner. It looked at Liesl for a moment.

Good-bye, Po said finally. Bundle went, Mwark.

Good-bye, Liesl said, but that time Po and Bundle were gone for real.

Chapter Two

AT THE VERY MOMENT THAT LIESL WAS SPEAKING the word Good-bye into an empty room, a very frazzled-looking alchemist’s apprentice was standing on the quiet street in front of her house, staring up at her darkened window and feeling sorry for himself.

He was wearing a large and lumpy coat that came well past his knees and had, in fact, most recently belonged to someone twice his age and size. He carried a wooden box—about the size of a loaf of bread—under one arm, and his hair was sticking up from his head at various odd angles and had in it the remnants of hay and dried leaves, because the night before he had once again messed up a potion and been forced by the alchemist to sleep out back, where the chickens and animals were.

But that wasn’t why the boy, whose name was Will but who also answered to Useless and Hopeless and Snot-Face and Sniveler (at least when the alchemist was the one calling to him), felt sorry for himself.

He felt sorry for himself because for the third night in a row the pretty girl with the straight brown hair was not sitting in the small attic window, framed by the soft golden glow of the oil lamp to her left, with her eyes turned downward as though she was working on something.

Scrat, Will said, which was what the alchemist usually said when he was upset about something. Because Will was extremely upset, he repeated it. Scrat.

He had been sure—sure!—that she would be there tonight. That was why he had come so far out of his way; that was why he had looped all the way around to Highland Avenue instead of going directly to Ebury Street, as the alchemist had told him a dozen times he must do.

As he had walked down empty street after empty street, past row after row of darkened houses, in silence so thick it was like a syrup that dragged his footsteps away into echoes before he had placed a heel on the ground, he had imagined it perfectly: how he would come around the corner and see that tiny square of light so many stories above him, and see her face floating there like a single star. She was not, Will had decided long ago, the type of person who would call him names other than his own; she was not impatient or mean or angry or snobby.

She was perfect.

Of course, Will had never actually spoken to the girl. And some small corner of his mind told him it was stupid to continue finding excuses, every single night, to go past her window. It was a waste of time. It was, as the alchemist would have said, useless. (Useless was one of the alchemist’s favorite words, and he used it interchangeably to describe Will’s plans, thoughts, work, appearance, and general selfhood.)

Will was sure that if he ever had the chance to speak to the girl in the window, he would be too afraid to. Besides, he felt certain he would never have that chance. She stayed in her window, far above him; he stayed on the street, far below her. And that was how things were.

But every night for the past year since he had first seen her heart-shaped face floating there in the middle of that light, and no matter how many times he had scolded himself or tried to go in the opposite direction or sworn that he would stay away from Highland Avenue no matter what, his feet had seemed to circle him back toward that same stretch of sidewalk just below her window.

The truth was this: Will was lonely. During the day he studied with the alchemist, who was seventy-four years old and smelled like sour milk. At night he carried out the alchemist’s

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