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Mind the Gap: A Novel of the Hidden Cities
 
 
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Mind the Gap: A Novel of the Hidden Cities [Paperback]

Christopher Golden (Author), Tim Lebbon (Author)
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)

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Book Description

May 20, 2008
You never know when you’ll find yourself
falling through one of the cracks in the world.…

Two of today’s brightest stars of dark fantasy combine their award-winning, critically acclaimed talents in this spellbinding new tale of magic, terror, and adventure that begins when a young woman slips through the space between our everyday world and the one hiding just beneath it.

Always assume there’s someone after you. That was the paranoid wisdom her mother had hardwired into Jasmine Towne ever since she was a little girl. Now, suddenly on her own, Jazz is going to need every skill she has ever been taught to survive enemies both seen and unseen. For her mother had given Jazz one last invaluable piece of advice, written in her own blood.

Jazz Hide Forever

All her life Jazz has known them only as the “Uncles,” and her mother seemed to fear them as much as depend on them. Now these enigmatic, black-clad strangers are after Jazz for reasons she can’t fathom, and her only escape is to slip into the forgotten tunnels of London’s vast underground. Here she will meet a tribe of survivors calling themselves the United Kingdom and begin an adventure that links her to the ghosts of a city long past, a father she never knew, and a destiny she fears only slightly less than the relentless killers who’d commit any crime under heaven or earth to prevent her from fulfilling it.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Dark fantasists Golden (The Myth Hunters) and Lebbon (Dawn) pair up for the first time in this macabre tale that recalls Holly Black's acclaimed Valiant. As wary teenager Jasmine Towne runs from the mysterious Uncles who killed her mother, an impulsive dash into an Underground tunnel takes her to Deep Level Shelter 7-K, where she falls in with a group of homeless thieves led by the raggedly elegant Harold Pilkington Fowler. Jazz knows to fear the Uncles, who are stalking her for some magical purpose, but she never expected to see ghosts or hear the restless spirit of the old city wailing in the tunnels. With the help of enigmatic burglar Terence, Jazz investigates her mother's murder and her own mysterious origins and powers. Occasional gaps in the story logic are easy to miss amid the super-fast pacing and creepy touches that give this teen adventure plenty of character. (May)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From School Library Journal

Adult/High School—Jasmine Towne returns to her London home one afternoon to find her mother murdered and the killers searching for her. With a little guile and a lot of luck, she manages to slip away from her pursuers by plunging into the Tube and hiding in abandoned stations and forgotten bomb shelters. She falls in with a group of teenage thieves led by the Faginesque Harry Fowler. She takes to thieving quite quickly, and Fowler sends her out on the most difficult jobs. Emboldened by her new skills, Jazz sets out to rob the mansion of one of the very men who killed her mother. There she meets Terence, who is breaking into the same house. Through him, Jazz learns that her mother's murder, the father she never knew, and even Fowler are all tied in to a secret society striving to revive the ancient spirits and magic hidden below the streets of London and use it for their own dark gains. The only way to avenge her mother's death and to guarantee her own safety is to help Terence set the spirits free. Jazz is the perfect teen heroine: capable, confident, and possessing both a love of trouble and enough smarts to get out of it. While more dark fantasy than horror, the story does have some small grisly sections. The basic setting recalls Neil Gaiman's Neverwhere (Morrow, 1997). But the bigger story and the battle over London's magic—to either set it free or to usurp it—lend a fresh take on urban fantasy.—Matthew L. Moffett, Pohick Regional Library, Burke, VA
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 400 pages
  • Publisher: Spectra (May 20, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0553384694
  • ISBN-13: 978-0553384697
  • Product Dimensions: 5 x 0.9 x 8.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 10.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #469,949 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

7 Reviews
5 star:
 (2)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:
 (4)
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Average Customer Review
3.7 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Atmospheric Story of a Hidden London, October 6, 2008
This review is from: Mind the Gap: A Novel of the Hidden Cities (Paperback)
Mind the Gap follows Jasmine Towne, who following her mother's murder by the mysterious Uncles, hides in the forgotten tunnels of London's underground system. Here she meets a group of children - the United Kingdom - looked after by an old man called Harry. With nowhere else to go she joins them - but the Uncles haven't stopped looking for her.

I'm not sure this is a book I could recommend to others. I would say it's a Young Adult book, except for the use of the f-word throughout, and I'm not sure what adult market it's aimed at. It's also somewhat depressing, painted in monochrome rather than colour. Pardon the pun - but there's little light at the end of the tunnel. It seems whenever Jaz thinks she's found a place or a person for herself something goes wrong. Don't get too fond of any endearing character.

Jaz as a heroine, didn't always ring true to me. In the flashbacks she doesn't always sound like a teenager. Given the circumstances maybe it's likely she would sound older than her years. However, there's the problem of her sounding older in flashback than she does in the present.

There were parts that I enjoyed. I felt like there were many Londons being woven into this story. Quite a lot of it had a Dickensian feel, the United Kingdom gang is reminiscent of Fagin and his boys from Oliver Twist. The use of the passage from Great Expectations towards the end of the book I thought worked really well.

There's also a slight fairy tale feel. Jaz likens herself to Wendy Darling (Peter Pan) and when she first descends into the Underground there is an atmosphere of Alice going down the rabbit hole.

The descriptions are well written and drew me into the book. When Jaz first flees into the Underground we're there on the Tube station with her, feeling the trains screaming past and seeing the unwelcome darkness of the tunnels. On the first burglary I was with Jaz as she entered the house, I felt her exhilaration and fear as she realizes there is another burglar in the house with her, and could almost taste the adrenaline rush as she decides to go ahead with her own robbery anyway.

Although this book isn't a keeper for me, I am glad I read it, after all you shouldn't get too stuck in your reading comfort zone. But I'm not sure whether I'd buy any follow up stories.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars London's Ghosts, July 7, 2008
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This review is from: Mind the Gap: A Novel of the Hidden Cities (Paperback)
An intriguing idea--all the ghosts of London past passing through the city's Underground system--but not entirely original. I believe CJ Cherryh did something similar with her dying sun stories set in London, Paris, & Russia. The motivation of the main character was very believable but I would have liked this more had the supporting characters been more fleshed out.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A good read, but never quite goes far enough, August 1, 2009
This review is from: Mind the Gap: A Novel of the Hidden Cities (Paperback)
Mind the Gap is an engrossing book that never quite goes far enough into the fantasy world for my tastes; it merely dances on the edge between fantasy and the real world, keeping more toward the reality side. When Jazz first retreats into the abadoned parts of London's subway system, I expect and hope she's going to hook up with something horrific, or wondrous. But instead she just falls in with a modern-day Fagan and his band of child thieves living in an old bomb shelter, and becomes a female Oliver Twist. She does have a few ghostly encounters underground, but nothing ever really comes of them, until the very end, at least. There are a lot of eldritch sparks flying throughout the book, but they never really catch fire. Jazz is merely an observer of the ghostly, until the end of the book. "Oh, look, ghosts."

It's a fairly pedestrian brush against a fantastical and hidden world that never quite materializes. The things you sense lurking in the shadows never reach out and grab the characters; the things that go bump in the night bump almost too softly to be heard. The authors tease us with abandoned, bricked up tunnels and doorways that hint at secrets beyond, but they never actually tear the bricks away and take us into those tunnels or through the doorways to reveal the secrets. I want to explore these hidden, forgotten places that the authors hint at, but instead they keep taking us back topside to the real London, dragging us along on the main character's adventures in cat burglary, and her involvement with a master cat burglar who turns out to be something more.

The authors do an excellent job of creating numerous moments of supernatural tension. But the tension is never really unleashed in a startling burst; it just sort of fizzles away. But it's a well-told story, extremely well-written, with a lot of tense moments. It hooks you at the very beginning and keeps you hooked, taking you on a fast-paced, entertaining literary journey that reaches a frenzied, satisfying ending. It does its job well enough, so I can't complain if the journey doesn't take me exactly where I want it to.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United Kingdom, Hour of Screams, Blackwood Club, Josephine Blackwood, Harry Fowler, Stevie Sharpe, Uncle Mort, Deep Level Shelter, Mayor Bromwell, Mortimer Keating, James Towne, Alan Whitcomb, Covent Garden, Cadge Jazz
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