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Triskellion [Hardcover]

Will Peterson (Author)
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

Price: $16.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details
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Book Description

May 27, 2008 Triskellion (Book 1)
In an unwelcoming English village, two young outsiders are swept up in an archaeological mystery that ends in a startling paranormal twist.

A sense of foreboding sets in the moment fourteen-year-old twins Rachel and Adam arrive from New York to visit their English grandmother. The station is empty, village streets are deserted, locals are hostile, and even their frail Granny Root is oddly distant. And what about the bees that appear to follow a mysterious force? It all seems tied up with the Triskellion — an intertwining symbol etched in chalk on the moors. With a growing sense of danger and white-knuckle suspense, the twins are compelled to unearth a secret that has protected the village for centuries, one that reveals a shocking truth about their ancestors — and themselves.

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Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal

Grade 5–9—Fourteen-year-old twins Rachel and Adam, fresh from Manhattan, arrive in a sleepy English village to spend the summer with their grandmother, away from their divorcing parents. On the surface, Triskellion seems like a charming place, but that perception quickly changes as they are thrown into the middle of a complicated power struggle involving local folklore and history, recent family scandals, and archaeological fever. The twins, who can communicate telepathically, begin to share dreams of a maiden, who looks like Rachel, and a knight, who looks like Gabriel, a mysteriously attractive boy who keeps leading them into trouble, but saving them as well. Ultimately, everything hinges on the search for the three blades of the Triskellion, an ancient artifact that involves a local beekeeper/amateur archaeologist; the fanatical son of the village leader and his followers; and the cast and crew of Treasure Hunters, a popular reality show. There's a fair amount of violence, but nothing gratuitous. Mysteries abound, and explanations are sometimes a little murky (what exactly is Gabriel?), but these questions may be resolved in the further installments of the planned trilogy. The plot moves along at a brisk pace, and there's plenty of adventure, dark and creepy atmosphere, and a touch of the paranormal. Recommend this to fans of Neil Gaiman and Neal Shusterman.—Mara Alpert, Los Angeles Public Library
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

About the Author

Will Peterson is a shared pseudonym for Mark Billingham, award-winning author of the best-selling Tom Thorne crime novels, and Peter Cocks, a popular children’s television writer and performer. Mark Billingham lives in London, and Peter Cocks lives in Kent, England.

Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 13 and up
  • Hardcover: 384 pages
  • Publisher: Candlewick (May 27, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0763639710
  • ISBN-13: 978-0763639716
  • Product Dimensions: 5.6 x 1.3 x 8.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,087,333 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Courtesy of Teens Read Too, December 3, 2009
This review is from: Triskellion (Paperback)
In the midst of their parents' ugly divorce, fourteen-year-old twins Adam and Rachel Newman are sent to their mother's home village in Great Britain to stay with their grandmother - but Triskellion proves to be no safe harbor amidst the storm.

From the moment of their arrival, the twins are treated with suspicion and hostility, with every building in town marked by a strange "symbol of three intersecting crescents forming a continuous pointed clover leaf, bound by a large circle." It is from this symbol (a triskellion) that the village takes its name.

Essentially cut off from civilization with no telephone, Internet, and hardly any television, the boys' suspicions deepen further after the pair meets Gabriel - a boy their age who seems to vanish at will. When a communiqué of the local beekeeper thrusts the isolated hamlet into the spotlight, Adam and Rachel discover there's more than a town's secret at stake as their entire world is rocked to its foundation.

Will Peterson makes his young adult debut with a page-turning, nail-biting, two-for-one special. Part paranormal, part mystery, TRISKELLION is unlike any other book in its genre. Peterson explores legends of the past, the psychic connection between twins, archaeology, and prophecy in one fell swoop.

While I still don't understand the significance of the bees, or how they're tied to certain characters' psychic abilities, and I was somewhat disappointed to find more questions than answers at the end, TRISKELLION kept me up for three nights straight, desperate to find out what happened. Good thing there's a sequel.

Reviewed by: Cat
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Impossible to resist, January 11, 2009
By 
A. Finch (Albuquerque, NM USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Triskellion 1 (Paperback)
I picked this up last month for three reasons: it was on sale; it had an interesting cover; the summary on the back included the phrase "archaeological adventure." Utterly and totally impossible to resist, and luckily it turned out pretty good!

Triskellion is about 14-year-old twins Rachel and Adam Newman who are sent off to stay with their grandmother in the English countryside. From the moment they arrive, they know Triskellion is an unusual place-- and soon they'll find out exactly how unusual it is. Dangerous gun-toting residents, a mysterious past, and some very big secrets mean Rachel and Adam will have to use their wits and extremely good intuition to solve the mystery that is the town of Triskellion.

From the get-go I assumed the plot would be a mix between The X-Files and Escape to Witch Mountain, and I was pretty much right! The twins have freaky brain powers, and the writing itself feels kinda like those X-Files novelizations (but better). It starts off a little slow, but by the time I was a third in I was hooked. The last third especially flew by fast; I actually stayed up 'til 3am to finish it! I'm glad I did because I honestly don't think I could have slept if I hadn't. The plot is by turns fascinating and ridiculous, and as a bonus you get a little romance and some archaeology.

The characters were decently crafted, though I think Adam tended to lack a bit in the personality department. Rachel was definitely well-done, and Gabriel-- the friend the twins make who can do freaky brain stuff, too-- was a really good mix between dangerous bad boy and heroic good boy. Most of the secondary characters were just outlines of people, but Jacob Honeyman, the local beekeeper (seriously), was by turns sympathetic and disgusting, and Hilary Wing was a nicely-done maniacal villain.

I did have a few problems, mostly with one particular scene where the twins tell someone their secrets and that person basically accepts them as fact, even though anyone else would think the twins were lying. No doubt, no denial, and the only explanation is that after looking at a few dead bodies with their hearts missing, they can believe anything. It just doesn't seem like a good enough reason. I am thinking now, though, that maybe in the next book it might be explained more.

There are several questions that never get fully answered, like just who Gabriel is or what's so weird about the dead bodies (besides the no hearts thing) or even what part the bees play in the whole thing. I would say, though, that you can read this book and maybe not feel the need to read the next, like maybe you've got enough answers to satisfy curiosity. It reminds me of Skellig that way. The ending is happy but also a cliffhanger, and I hope that all the questions are answered sufficiently in the next two books (it's a trilogy). I do plan on reading them! Er, but book isn't coming out until sometime later this year, and book three won't be out until 2010. Darn!

Overall, I had a wonderful time reading this, and I'd easily recommend it for people who like paranormal mixed in with a bit of Celtic/nature mythology (and possibly sci-fi), including children. Oh! Also, if you go to the website, there's a map and some extras available for download.
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4.0 out of 5 stars from the Me And My Big Mouth blog, June 26, 2010
This review is from: Triskellion (Paperback)
Imagine, if you will, a cross between The Dark Is Rising, Hot Fuzz and The Wicker Man.

Now, don't you wish they'd written books like that when you were a kid?

The Triskellion trilogy kicks off with a book that is just that: a classic adventure with a modern twist.

Rachel and Adam are twins, sent over from America to stay with their grandmother while their parents' marriage disintegrates on the other side of the Atlantic. They arrive in the small west country village of Triskellion to a somewhat lukewarm reception. There is something decidedly odd about these villagers.

But they don't know the half of it.

The twins uncover a whole host of dark secrets and, with the help of a mysterious young friend, begin a search for a hidden artefact. An item that will change their lives, and those of every villager, for ever.

The archaeological quest, which turns out to be a race against both time and a bunch of baddies, is reminiscent of first The Dark is Rising novel. No pale imitation this, it is every bit as exciting and magical.

The mysterious villagers with a whole bunch of hidden secrets and a tendency to meter out their own form of justice had a dark whiff of The Wicker Man or Hot Fuzz. Although without the adult content. Obviously.

The name on the cover is Will Peterson but the book is actually co-written by Mark Billingham and Peter Cocks. Mark is better known as the author of a hugely successful crime series - although I remember him as one of the Norman soldiers in Maid Marian & Her Merry Men - and he and Peter have written a bunch of TV shows together including The Cramp Twins. Their partnership clearly works well. I found myself completely wrapped up in this and so did my son Ethan. We both read it ahead of the Firestation Junior Book Swap yesterday at which Peter was a guest.

We will both be reading the rest of the trilogy.

The authors set out to write a multi-layered book that just happened to be for teenagers. It never patronises, is thoroughly entertaining and I'd recommend it to any grown ups who like a bit of supernatural adventure and would really suggest it as a must-read for any kids you have who are ten or older.
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