Every heart a doorway

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Winner of the Hugo Award, Hugo Award for Best Series, Alex Award, Locus Award, and Nebula Award Nominated for the World Fantasy Award, British Fantasy Award, and Tiptree Honor List"A mini-masterpiece of portal fantasy — a jewel of a book that deserves to be shelved with Lewis Carroll's and C. S. Lewis' classics" —NPRNew York Times bestselling author Seanan McGuire presents a fresh take on the portal fantasy genre that blends Alice in Wonderland, The Magicians, and The Nightmare Before Christmas.Eleanor West's Home for Wayward Children No Solicitations No Visitors No QuestsChildren have always disappeared under the right conditions; slipping through the shadows under a bed or at the back of a wardrobe, tumbling down rabbit holes and into old wells, and emerging somewhere... else.But magical lands have little need for used-up miracle children.Nancy tumbled once, but now she's back. The things she's experienced... they change a person. The children under Miss West's care understand all too well. And each of them is seeking a way back to their own fantasy world.But Nancy's arrival marks a change at the Home. There's a darkness just around each corner, and when tragedy strikes, it's up to Nancy and her new-found schoolmates to get to the heart of things.No matter the cost.The Wayward Children SeriesBook 1: Every Heart a DoorwayBook 2: Down Among the Sticks and BonesBook 3: Beneath the Sugar SkyBook 4: In an Absent Dream

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ISBN
9780765385505
9781427270924
9780765383877

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Also in this Series

  • Every heart a doorway (Wayward children Volume 1) Cover
  • Down among the sticks and bones (Wayward children Volume 2) Cover
  • Beneath the sugar sky (Wayward children Volume 3) Cover
  • In an absent dream (Wayward children Volume 4) Cover
  • Come tumbling down (Wayward children Volume 5) Cover
  • Across the green grass fields (Wayward children Volume 6) Cover
  • Where the drowned girls go (Wayward children Volume 7) Cover
  • Lost in the moment and found (Wayward children Volume 8) Cover
  • Mislaid in parts half-known (Wayward children Volume 9) Cover
  • Adrift in currents clean and clear (Wayward children Volume 10) Cover

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Similar Series From Novelist

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for series you might like if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
Like the titular children of Wayward, the adult protagonists of the Down novels stumble into an alternate fantasy realm. In each, characters must work together to survive individual challenges. The Down series' setting is darker, and its characters' dilemmas morally murky. -- Kim Burton
Featuring interlocking fantasy realms, these fairy tale-like novels are notable for strong female characters and effective world-building. Although Darker is indeed darker than the more whimsical Wayward, both are descriptive, engaging, and deeply inventive. -- Mike Nilsson
Both fantasy series feature well-developed and LQBTQIA diverse characters who are plunged into a magical setting filled with fairies, monsters, and other fantastical elements while sorting out their complicated relationships. Readers are immersed in engaging tales that feel familiar yet haunting. -- Andrienne Cruz
These fantasy fiction series' revolve around characters in magical boarding schools. In the Scholomance novels, magical teenage students train to be sorcerers while in the Wayward novellas characters are rehabilitated after traveling in and out of fantasy realms. -- Heather Cover
Fantasy fans will find plenty of mystery, intrigue, magic, and adventure in these compelling and atmospheric standalone stories of epic fantasy (Secret Projects) and gateway fantasy (Wayward Children). -- Andrienne Cruz
Inspired by fairy tale adventures, these atmospheric and suspenseful gateway fantasy novels have compelling world-building that literally transports young protagonists into magical realms where they face their fears to survive real and make-believe threats. -- Andrienne Cruz
These series have the genres "fantasy fiction" and "gateway fantasy"; and the subjects "imaginary places" and "parallel universes."
These series have the appeal factors atmospheric, and they have the genres "fantasy fiction" and "gateway fantasy"; and the subjects "parallel universes," "interdimensional travel," and "imaginary kingdoms."
These series have the genres "fantasy fiction" and "gateway fantasy"; and the subjects "parallel universes" and "interdimensional travel."

Similar Titles From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for titles you might like if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
These books have the appeal factors atmospheric, and they have the theme "dark academia"; the genre "adult books for young adults"; the subjects "boarding schools," "magic," and "boarding school students"; and characters that are "well-developed characters."
NoveList recommends "Book of Lost Things" for fans of "Wayward children". Check out the first book in the series.
In each of these whimsical contemporary fantasies, a newcomer changes the status quo at a school (Every Heart) and an orphanage (Cerulean Sea) populated by children with magical abilities. Both examine the idea of belonging and what it means to be "different". -- Halle Carlson
NoveList recommends "Greenhollow duology" for fans of "Wayward children". Check out the first book in the series.
NoveList recommends "Scholomance" for fans of "Wayward children". Check out the first book in the series.
Returning to reality after a sojourn in a magical realm proves difficult for the sympathetic teen characters in these intriguing, atmospheric gateway fantasies. Sibling responsibilities and a longing for home feature strongly in each. Light is for teens; Heart for adults. -- Rebecca Honeycutt
These books have the appeal factors amusing, and they have the theme "dark lord"; the genres "fantasy fiction" and "gateway fantasy"; the subjects "magic," "wizards," and "secrets"; and characters that are "likeable characters" and "well-developed characters."
NoveList recommends "Darker shade of magic" for fans of "Wayward children". Check out the first book in the series.
Both descriptive and compelling gateway fantasy novels feature elements of horror, following children coping with trauma who are drawn to dangerous portals to other realms as they feel alienated in the real world. -- CJ Connor
NoveList recommends "Secret projects" for fans of "Wayward children". Check out the first book in the series.
NoveList recommends "Down novels" for fans of "Wayward children". Check out the first book in the series.
These atmospheric and engaging darkish fantasies thrum with a yearning for acceptance and home, found among unusual students and staff at rather peculiar schools. Every Heart a Doorway is for adults, while Miss Peregrine's Home is a teen novel. -- Melissa Gray

Similar Authors From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for other authors you might want to read if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
Charles de Lint's urban fantasy stories take place in Newford, an imaginary North American city that will appeal to fans of Seanan McGuire's San Francisco setting. Readers of McGuire will appreciate de Lint's evocative, character-driven stories. -- Katherine Johnson
These authors serve up richly detailed urban fantasy and gateway fantasy with authentic, diverse characters. Na'amen Gobert Tilahun's protagonist is gay, and Seanan McGuire's are primarily heterosexual. For both writers, it's the detailed, atmospheric storyline and setting that draws readers into the compelling stories set in San Francisco. -- Katherine Johnson
A. Deborah Baker is a pen name used by Seanan McGuire for her Up-and-Under series of offbeat, wordplay-filled gateway fantasy novels. -- Autumn Winters
F.T. Lukens's work typically skews romantic and has a narrower tonal range than Seanan McGuire's books, which are written with darkly humorous or suspenseful tones. Still, both of these authors write fantasy novels set in fast-paced, richly built worlds populated by LGBTQIA characters. -- Basia Wilson
These authors' works have the appeal factors world-building, and they have the genres "urban fantasy" and "dark fantasy"; and the subjects "supernatural," "fairies," and "daye, october (fictitious character)."
These authors' works have the appeal factors darkly humorous, offbeat, and world-building, and they have the genre "urban fantasy"; the subjects "supernatural," "daye, october (fictitious character)," and "demons"; and characters that are "sarcastic characters" and "well-developed characters."
These authors' works have the appeal factors whimsical, and they have the genre "gateway fantasy"; the subjects "supernatural," "interdimensional travel," and "imaginary places"; and characters that are "sarcastic characters."
These authors' works have the genre "urban fantasy"; and the subjects "supernatural," "daye, october (fictitious character)," and "demons."
These authors' works have the genre "urban fantasy"; the subjects "fairies," "half-human hybrids," and "daye, october (fictitious character)"; and characters that are "sarcastic characters."
These authors' works have the appeal factors banter-filled, and they have the genre "urban fantasy"; the subjects "supernatural," "half-human hybrids," and "daye, october (fictitious character)"; and characters that are "flawed characters" and "sarcastic characters."
These authors' works have the appeal factors world-building, and they have the genres "urban fantasy" and "fantasy mysteries"; the subjects "supernatural," "daye, october (fictitious character)," and "women private investigators"; and characters that are "flawed characters" and "sarcastic characters."
These authors' works have the appeal factors banter-filled, and they have the genre "urban fantasy"; the subjects "supernatural," "daye, october (fictitious character)," and "parallel universes"; include the identity "lgbtqia+"; and characters that are "sarcastic characters."

Published Reviews

Booklist Review

*Starred Review* If fairy tales are true, then what happens once you leave Wonderland? Nancy is one of those children who found a magic door, but to prove that she's worthy of staying forever in the Underworld, she is sent back where her parents desperately enroll her in Eleanor West's Home for Wayward Children. In this cross between a school and an asylum, Nancy mixes with others just like her: a prince with a mistaken identity, twins who've hung out with mad scientists and vampires, and many other girls who wandered through other worlds only to find themselves inevitably stranded. All of the students are trying to find the portal back to their fairyland despite reminders that most doors open only once. Nancy discovers the lengths that Wayward Children will go to rediscover their worlds when her roommate, Sumi, turns up mutilated and murdered. McGuire takes readers by the hand and leads them down the twisty pathways of childhood, opening mysterious trunks and tapping on magical doors, down the rabbit holes of realization that perhaps every legend was true, once, for some child. And for every child who discovered the magic of a world where he or she finally perfectly fit in, there's an adult who reluctantly returned to earth by stumbling through a door of realization or simply by turning the page. This amazing fantasy pierces the shimmering veil of childhood imagination by reminding adult readers that their own doorways still exist deep in the chambers of their all-too-human hearts.--Howerton, Erin Downey Copyright 2017 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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Publisher's Weekly Review

A boarding school offering sanctuary for very special teens is threatened by a series of murders in McGuire's darkly hypnotic standalone fantasy. Eleanor West has spent her life helping kids who discover secret doors to beguiling worlds and long to return to them. When Nancy arrives at Eleanor's manor, unrest seems close behind. If only Nancy could return to the Halls of the Dead and the waiting arms of that dimension's lord, she could be happy, but first she'll have to help the others track down a killer who's taking something different from each victim. The students include twins called Jack and Jill; a boy who can speak to bones; and Sumi, Nancy's roommate, who comes from a world of nonsense and speaks in lilting, looping curlicues of words. McGuire (the October Daye series) puts her own inimitable spin on portal fantasy, adding horror elements to the mix, and her characters are strange and charming. Being different is all these kids have ever known, but as much as they pine for their other worlds, they ultimately find comfort in one another. This gothic charmer is a love letter to anyone who's ever felt out of place. Agent: Diana Fox, Fox Literary. (Apr.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
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School Library Journal Review

This new story from a veteran fantasy author offers writing that's full of imagery and evocative emotions and helps build suspense from the very first sentence. Behind the titular doorway lie alternate worlds, some magical, some dangerous, and some both. The children, mostly girls, who go through the doors become irrevocably changed, many of them becoming mature beyond their actual years. When they return to the real world, their families and friends no longer understand them. And some, like Nancy, want desperately to return to their alternate world, where they felt welcomed and loved. Eleanor West was once a young traveler to those worlds, and now she runs a home for these wayward children, helping them adjust to reality. Just as Nancy begins to make a place for herself, a puzzling and gruesome series of murders threaten the students and the home's very existence. The characters are well drawn, and their feelings about their impossible situation are believable. The alienation they experience and their struggles to find a way back will appeal to teens. When the murderer is revealed, the motivation will be understood by characters and readers alike. VERDICT Though short (this tale is more novella than novel), this clever inside out fantasy will intrigue fantasy fans and those who loved Ransom Riggs's Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children.-Gretchen Crowley, Alexandria City Public Libraries, VA © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Library Journal Review

Sometimes children disappear, and when they come back, their stories of fantastical lands are too much for their families to handle. Eleanor West's Home for Wayward Children is a place for such "troubled" youth. One new resident is Nancy, who is surprised to find out this home is different, and occupied by many children, like herself, who have been cast out of their otherworldly dwellings. Learning to deal with the strangeness of reality is hard enough; interacting with peculiar children even more so. When tragedy strikes at the home, Nancy and her new friends must root out the darkness at the heart of their lives, otherwise they will never return to their families. VERDICT -McGuire's ("October Daye" series) lyrical prose makes this novella a rich experience. Readers will be unable to resist the children's longing for home, no matter how bizarre or fanciful that destination may be.-KC © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Kirkus Book Review

The first in a novella series best characterized as post-portal fantasy: What happens after the rabbit hole spits you back out?One day, Nancy found a door in her basement that led to a pomegranate grove. Following that path, she spent years in blissful quiet and perfect stillness in the Halls of the Dead, serving its Lord and Lady. But now she's back in our world, and her distressed parents don't know how to cope with a daughter who refuses to admit where she really went, only dresses in drab colors, and refuses to date boys. Fortunately, Eleanor West's Home for Wayward Children exists for boys and girls like Nancy; it's a place where stories like hers are believed and young people learn how to cope with their feelings of loss, even as they all desperately search for a way back to that other place. Nancy is a bit overwhelmed by her fellow students, returnees from nonsensical lands constructed of sugar, rule-based fairylands, gothic moorlands inhabited by vampires and mad scientists, and sky-based societies where everyone runs on rainbows. Her sense of disorientation only increases when someone starts brutally murdering the students and staff at the school, and Nancy's experiences with the dead make her a suspect. McGuire (Chaos Choreography, 2016, etc.) provides answers, or at least valid-seeming speculations, for anyone who's ever wondered how Susan really felt after she was barred from Narnia and if Alice managed to become a proper Victorian young lady after her return from Wonderland. McGuire understands and has true compassion (never pity) for outcasts and outliers while also making it clear that being a misfit doesn't mean you'll necessarily get along with all the other misfits, who don't fit for different reasons. Her depiction of teen interactions is believably prickly.Thoughtfully and poignantly wonders if, or hopes that, you can go home again, depending on what you define as home. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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Booklist Reviews

*Starred Review* If fairy tales are true, then what happens once you leave Wonderland? Nancy is one of those children who found a magic door, but to prove that she's worthy of staying forever in the Underworld, she is sent back—where her parents desperately enroll her in Eleanor West's Home for Wayward Children. In this cross between a school and an asylum, Nancy mixes with others just like her: a prince with a mistaken identity, twins who've hung out with mad scientists and vampires, and many other girls who wandered through other worlds only to find themselves inevitably stranded. All of the students are trying to find the portal back to their fairyland—despite reminders that most doors open only once. Nancy discovers the lengths that Wayward Children will go to rediscover their worlds when her roommate, Sumi, turns up mutilated and murdered. McGuire takes readers by the hand and leads them down the twisty pathways of childhood, opening mysterious trunks and tapping on magical doors, down the rabbit holes of realization that perhaps every legend was true, once, for some child. And for every child who discovered the magic of a world where he or she finally perfectly fit in, there's an adult who reluctantly returned to earth by stumbling through a door of realization or simply by turning the page. This amazing fantasy pierces the shimmering veil of childhood imagination by reminding adult readers that their own doorways still exist deep in the chambers of their all-too-human hearts. Copyright 2017 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2017 Booklist Reviews.
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Library Journal Reviews

Sometimes children disappear, and when they come back, their stories of fantastical lands are too much for their families to handle. Eleanor West's Home for Wayward Children is a place for such "troubled" youth. One new resident is Nancy, who is surprised to find out this home is different, and occupied by many children, like herself, who have been cast out of their otherworldly dwellings. Learning to deal with the strangeness of reality is hard enough; interacting with peculiar children even more so. When tragedy strikes at the home, Nancy and her new friends must root out the darkness at the heart of their lives, otherwise they will never return to their families. VERDICT McGuire's ("October Daye" series) lyrical prose makes this novella a rich experience. Readers will be unable to resist the children's longing for home, no matter how bizarre or fanciful that destination may be.—KC

[Page 77]. (c) Copyright 2016 Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Copyright 2016 Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Publishers Weekly Reviews

A boarding school offering sanctuary for very special teens is threatened by a series of murders in McGuire's darkly hypnotic standalone fantasy. Eleanor West has spent her life helping kids who discover secret doors to beguiling worlds and long to return to them. When Nancy arrives at Eleanor's manor, unrest seems close behind. If only Nancy could return to the Halls of the Dead and the waiting arms of that dimension's lord, she could be happy, but first she'll have to help the others track down a killer who's taking something different from each victim. The students include twins called Jack and Jill; a boy who can speak to bones; and Sumi, Nancy's roommate, who comes from a world of nonsense and speaks in lilting, looping curlicues of words. McGuire (the October Daye series) puts her own inimitable spin on portal fantasy, adding horror elements to the mix, and her characters are strange and charming. Being different is all these kids have ever known, but as much as they pine for their other worlds, they ultimately find comfort in one another. This gothic charmer is a love letter to anyone who's ever felt out of place. Agent: Diana Fox, Fox Literary. (Apr.)

[Page ]. Copyright 2015 PWxyz LLC

Copyright 2015 PWxyz LLC
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School Library Journal Reviews

This new story from a veteran fantasy author offers writing that's full of imagery and evocative emotions and helps build suspense from the very first sentence. Behind the titular doorway lie alternate worlds, some magical, some dangerous, and some both. The children, mostly girls, who go through the doors become irrevocably changed, many of them becoming mature beyond their actual years. When they return to the real world, their families and friends no longer understand them. And some, like Nancy, want desperately to return to their alternate world, where they felt welcomed and loved. Eleanor West was once a young traveler to those worlds, and now she runs a home for these wayward children, helping them adjust to reality. Just as Nancy begins to make a place for herself, a puzzling and gruesome series of murders threaten the students and the home's very existence. The characters are well drawn, and their feelings about their impossible situation are believable. The alienation they experience and their struggles to find a way back will appeal to teens. When the murderer is revealed, the motivation will be understood by characters and readers alike. VERDICT Though short (this tale is more novella than novel), this clever inside out fantasy will intrigue fantasy fans and those who loved Ransom Riggs's Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children.—Gretchen Crowley, Alexandria City Public Libraries, VA

[Page 89]. (c) Copyright 2016 Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Copyright 2016 Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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