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Red Glove (Curse Workers) Paperback – Bargain Price, April 3, 2012
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After rescuing his brothers from Zacharov’s retribution and finding out that Lila, the girl he has loved his whole life, will never, ever be his, Cassel is trying to reestablish some kind of normalcy in his life. That was never going to be easy for someone from a worker family that’s tied to one of the big crime families—and whose mother’s cons get more reckless by the day. But Cassel is coming to terms with what it means to be a transformation worker, and he’s figuring out how to have friends.
Except normal doesn’t last very long. Soon Cassel is being courted by both sides of the law and is forced to confront his past—a past he remembers only in scattered fragments, and one that could destroy his family and his future. Cassel will have to decide whose side he wants to be on, because neutrality is not an option. And then he will have to pull off his biggest con ever to survive….
- Print length352 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherMargaret K. McElderry Books
- Publication dateApril 3, 2012
- Reading age14 years and up
- Dimensions5.5 x 1.1 x 8.25 inches
- ISBN-101442403403
- ISBN-13978-1442403406
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"Dark, disturbing fare, crafted by a master; readers of the trilogy's first will be supremely satisfied."--Kirkus Reviews
"Readers will be happy to slip back into Black’s elaborate, fascinating world of workers, curses, and the seeming ease with which everyone has learned to live in a world where no one, not even family, can be truly trusted, and this sequel offers satisfying additional glimpses into this nearly familiar but ultimately shockingly different world."--Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books
"The Curse Workers series continues to offer a sleek and stylish blend of urban fantasy and crime noir."--Booklist
About the Author
Product details
- ASIN : B00DPNVB66
- Publisher : Margaret K. McElderry Books; Reprint edition (April 3, 2012)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 352 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1442403403
- ISBN-13 : 978-1442403406
- Reading age : 14 years and up
- Item Weight : 11.2 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.5 x 1.1 x 8.25 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #9,235,311 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #3,296 in Teen & Young Adult Fairy Tale & Folklore Adaptations
- #27,687 in Teen & Young Adult Action & Adventure
- #28,386 in Deals in Books
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Holly Black is the #1 New York Times bestselling and award-winning author of speculative and fantasy novels, short stories, and comics. She has been a finalist for an Eisner and a Lodestar Award, and the recipient of the Mythopoeic Award, a Nebula, and a Newbery Honor. She has sold over 26 million books worldwide, her work has been translated into over 30 languages and adapted for film. She currently lives in New England with her husband and son in a house with a secret library.
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And then Lila was murdered, and everything changed.
For a long time Cassel thought he was the murderer. He thought his family were protecting him from Zacharov's wrath . . . he didn't realize that his family had been working him. Stealing his memories, warping his past and his emotions. But the biggest secret of all that his family kept from him was that he was a worker. The most gifted worker of all, no less. Because Cassel works transformation. He can change any object into his liking. He can alter someone's physical appearance; turn a girl into a cat and a man into a chair. He is the perfect assassin, and his family used him as such.
Now the truth is out. Lila lives, and Cassel knows he cannot trust his brothers, Barron and Phillip. And transformation is Cassel's coveted magic.
For a long time Cassel thought he would amount to nothing. Now he is just starting to understand how valuable he has always been. And now he has a choice to make - will he use his powers for good, or follow in his family's footsteps?
`Red Glove' is the second book in Holly Black's twistingly brilliant `Curseworkers' series.
I loved the first book `White Cat' - it became an instant favourite and was proudly passed around to friends and family. I had extremely high expectations going into `Red Glove', and I am happy to say that Black met each and every one of them. . .
When `Red Glove' begins, Cassel is living in the fall-out of his revelations. He knows that his family betrayed him for years, his brother's worst of all. His mother worked a love curse on Lila and now the only girl he has ever cared about has false emotions for him. His friends at the prestigious Wallingford academy, Sam and Daneca, know what he is but not what he can do . . . but the biggest discovery that Cassel is trying to contend with, is accepting his own villainy.
His brother, Barron, kept Cassel blissfully ignorant of his transformation assassinations. In `Red Glove' Cassel is coming to terms with the fact that for years he has been involved in mob activities. And just because he can't remember what he has done, does not mean his hands are any less bloodied. Cassel's conscience suffers a crippling blow in the beginning of `Red Glove', when someone close to him is murdered . . . and Cassel must admit that he all but signed the death warrant.
When Cassel is approached by the FBI to act as narc against the Zacharov family, he is somewhat tempted by the idea of a morally clean slate.
Holly Black is weaving one twisted tale in her `Curseworkers' series. Even Tony Soprano's head would be spinning for all the double-dealings, double-talk and betraying. I absolutely love the sunken morals of this series. It's fascinating to read the inner-workings of mob relations and the myriad of ways that Cassel uses the bad guys against themselves. Because Cassel doesn't want to be bad. Sure, he does bad things - like act as his school's bookie, break girl's hearts and con the occasional sap. But for the most part Cassel is desperate to keep his head down and his hands clean. But as that classic quote goes; "Just when I thought I was out... they pull me back in."
Cassel is lost. This series is all about reading him find his way. Cassel doesn't have a lot of guidance on the path to redemption - his family are his biggest betrayers, the girl he loves is destined for mob royalty and even the Feds are using him for their own gains. But through all this murk, Cassel is guided by a self-imposed moral compass that will lead him true. He's a fantastic character and a great disrepute to the old nature vs nurture debate. I love Cassel, for all his faults he is a core good guy and I can't wait to read the ways in which he will find his way to right.
I adore Cassel, and maybe that's why I despise the character of Lila so much. I didn't like her in `White Cat', but I half expected Cassel to realize she's not a very nice girl and get over her. But in `Red Glove' it seems Cassel is stuck in his romantic ways. He cannot see Lila for what she really is; a not very nice girl who will only drag Cassel away from his path to righteousness. She is his Lady Macbeth, and I cringe to think where she will lead him. I can't really tell at this point where Holly Black wants to take readers with regards to Lila. Are we meant to hate her? Are we supposed to begrudgingly like her, the same as Cassel? I can't tell, all I know is there is a car crash waiting to happen between Lila and Cassel . . .
One of the things I love most about the `Curseworkers' series is how immersive it is. Holly Black has written a fantastic society and impending civil rights movement between workers and humans. In this world, workers are on the cusp of being ghettoized, named, shamed and tagged. The Government, and one zealous senator in particular, are keen to force citizens to sit physical testing which will determine if they can work magic or not. Presumably once people are `tagged' as workers (not dissimilar to having to wear a Star of David on your lapel) society could go into a freefall - implementing something close to apartheid to separate the humans from the workers. Now, Black hasn't made all these politics the main focus of Cassel's story. The politics are always playing out in the background, and the most they impact him and his friends is via school clubs and debate teams. But I love the intricate political backdrop that makes this world all the more substantial. I love the symbolism of wearing gloves and the power behind taking them off, it's not dissimilar to refusing to give up your seat on a bus.
`Curseworkers' is a fantastic addition to the YA paranormal genre. Holly Black is drawing on classic mobster tales, from `The Godfather' to `The Sopranos'. But she's also writing a moral conundrum of Shakespearian proportions. Cassel Sharpe is in blood stepped in so far that should he wade no more returning were as tedious as going . . . and I can't wait to read which way he goes.
I've got this one last year to figure things out. The school's supposed to be grooming me for something. I'm just not sure what that something is.
I could always go into the family business. After all I am pretty skilled at the con. I'm used to working all the angles, trusting no one. But after spending the summer with Mom I'm really not sure I'm cut out for her kind of con. Just watching the marks get emotion worked turns my stomach.
Then there's the option to follow in Philip's footsteps, getting my own set of keloid scars and working a pretty cush job for Zacharov. I'm sure I'll go much farther than my brother. I've got much more to offer Lila's Dad than he ever did.
My decision won't be easy, especially with everyone seeming to want a piece of what I've got. Mom, Barron, Zacharov, the Feds...
Well, whatever I do choose, I know one thing for certain - curse working is in my blood. I may not have been completely responsible for what happened to Lila, but I am a murderer. I can feel it.
***
When Cassel Sharpe returns to Wallingford he's glad to finally have some distance from his curse worker mother. Although he's happy she's out of prison, he could never quite get comfortable with the way she so carelessly used her ability to emotion work someone.
His return to Wallingford gets quickly disrupted when two Feds show up at the school to deliver some shocking news about his brother Philip. And if that wasn't bad enough they are trying to use him to get information on a number of unsolved crimes. Crimes that seem terribly familiar to him.
To complicate things even more, a new student shows up at the school, someone he never in a million years thought he would see at Wallingford. Someone with the potential to make his life a living hell.
Red Glove is the to-die-for second book in The Curse Workers series. It takes place just a few months after White Cat ends and pulls you right back into the story and Cassel Sharpe's world.
There is no huge gap between the first story and this one and no need for lengthy explanations about what went on previously. Readers will immediately be able to just pick up where the story left off and tumble right back into Cassel's life.
As a sequel, this story continues to surprise and amaze. Cassel is presented with some very tempting and some not-so-tempting choices. Choices that will certainly cost someone. Tough choices that wouldn't be easy for anyone, let alone someone Cassel's age.
There is a mystery that Cassel and his friends work to solve, while Cassel secretly tries to figure out what part he played. And the tension between workers and non-workers has definitely begun to escalate not so quietly in the background in this book.
Once again, it's difficult to pinpoint the bad guys. The lines are definitely blurred. Cassel Sharpe may even be one of them - he just feels dangerous. He may not consider himself a danger. He may think that he's done a perfect job of blending in, but he's not as clever as he thinks he is at disguising what lurks just under the surface.
Red Glove is an absolute must read for those looking to solve a mystery, who prefer a story with characters living on the razor's edge, battling not only their adversaries but their inner demons, and for those who aren't afraid to take a walk on the dark side. For those readers this story and series are epic.






