4.6
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53,357 ratings
A NEW YORK TIMES, USA TODAY, and WASHINGTON POST BESTSELLER!
A 2021 Alex Award winner!
The 2021 RUSA Reading List: Fantasy Winner!
An Indie Next Pick!
One of Publishers Weekly's "Most Anticipated Books of Spring 2020"
One of Book Riot’s “20 Must-Read Feel-Good Fantasies”
Lambda Literary Award-winning author TJ Klune’s bestselling, breakout contemporary fantasy that's "1984 meets The Umbrella Academy with a pinch of Douglas Adams thrown in." (Gail Carriger)
A magical island. A dangerous task. A burning secret.
Linus Baker leads a quiet, solitary life. At forty, he lives in a tiny house with a devious cat and his old records. As a Case Worker at the Department in Charge Of Magical Youth, he spends his days overseeing the well-being of children in government-sanctioned orphanages.
When Linus is unexpectedly summoned by Extremely Upper Management he's given a curious and highly classified assignment: travel to Marsyas Island Orphanage, where six dangerous children reside: a gnome, a sprite, a wyvern, an unidentifiable green blob, a were-Pomeranian, and the Antichrist. Linus must set aside his fears and determine whether or not they’re likely to bring about the end of days.
But the children aren’t the only secret the island keeps. Their caretaker is the charming and enigmatic Arthur Parnassus, who will do anything to keep his wards safe. As Arthur and Linus grow closer, long-held secrets are exposed, and Linus must make a choice: destroy a home or watch the world burn.
An enchanting story, masterfully told, The House in the Cerulean Sea is about the profound experience of discovering an unlikely family in an unexpected place―and realizing that family is yours.
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ISBN-10
1250217318
ISBN-13
978-1250217318
Print length
416 pages
Language
English
Publisher
Tor
Publication date
December 28, 2020
Dimensions
5.4 x 1.05 x 8.2 inches
Item weight
2.31 pounds
The things we fear the most are often the things we should fear the least. It’s irrational, but it’s what makes us human. And if we’re able to conquer those fears, then there is nothing we’re not capable of.
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Sometimes, he thought to himself in a house in a cerulean sea, you were able to choose the life you wanted. And if you were of the lucky sort, sometimes that life chose you back.
Highlighted by 5,184 Kindle readers
He couldn’t believe it was only Wednesday. And it was made worse when he realized it was actually Tuesday.
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ASIN :
B07QPHT8CB
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7583 KB
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Supported
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"I loved it. It is like being wrapped up in a big gay blanket. Simply perfect." ―V.E. Schwab, #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue
"It will renew your faith in humanity.” ―Terry Brooks, New York Times bestselling author of the Shannara series
“It’s a witty, wholesome fantasy that’s likely to cause heart-swelling.” ―The Washington Post
“The House in The Cerulean Sea is a modern fairy tale about learning your true nature and what you love and will protect. It's a beautiful book.” ―Charlaine Harris, #1 New York Times bestselling author
“1984 meets The Umbrella Academy with a pinch of Douglas Adams thrown in. Touching, tender, and truly delightful, The House in the Cerulean Sea is an utterly absorbing story of tolerance, found family, and defeating bureaucracy.”―Gail Carriger, New York Times bestselling author of Soulless
“Sweet, comforting, and kind, this book is very close to perfect. The House in the Cerulean Sea is a work of classic children's literature written for adults and children alike, with the perspective and delicacy of the modern day. I cannot recommend it highly enough.” ―Seanan McGuire, New York Times bestselling author of Every Heart a Doorway
“Is it possible to fall in love with someone’s imagination? If so, consider me fully smitten. TJ Klune creates worlds where fear and threat can be conquered by kindness, and a tender, queer heart is more valuable than any weapon or power.” ―David Levithan
“Quirk and charm give way to a serious exploration of the dangers of complacency in this delightful, thought-provoking Orwellian fantasy from Klune.... This tale of found family is hopeful to its core. Readers will revel in Klune’s wit and ingenuity.” ―Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"Lambda Literary Award-winning author Klune (The Art of Breathing, 2019, etc.) has a knack for creating endearing characters, and readers will grow to love Arthur and the orphans alongside Linus... fans of quirky fantasy will eat it up. A breezy and fun contemporary fantasy." ―Kirkus
“This is a sweet narrative about the value of asking questions and the benefits of giving people (especially children) a chance to be safe, protected, and themselves, regardless of what assumptions one might glean from, say, reading their case file.” ―Booklist
“This inclusive fantasy is quite possibly the greatest feel-good story ever to involve the Antichrist.... The House in the Cerulean Sea will delight fans of Seanan McGuire's Wayward Children series and any reader looking for a burst of humor and hope.” ―Shelf Awareness
“A beautiful little gem of both irony and, yes, kindness.” ―Fantasy & Science Fiction
“TJ Klune is a master storyteller.” ―The Mary Sue
"A delightful tale about chosen families, and how to celebrate differences." ―Library Journal
“If ever there was an author to watch out for, [Klune] is definitely that author.” ―Culturess Daily
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FOR HUMANITY:
You kinda suck, but you invented books and music, so the universe will probably keep you around for a little bit longer. You got lucky. This time.
In an old and lonely forest, far away from almost everything, sat a curious dwelling.
At the base of a grove of massive trees was a small, square building made of brick, overtaken by ivy and moss. Who it belonged to was anyone’s guess, but from the looks of it, it had been abandoned long ago. It wasn’t until a man named Giovanni Lawson (who wasn’t actually a man at all) came across it while making his way through the forest that it was remembered with any purpose.
He stood in front of his strange find, listening as the birds sang in the branches high above. “What’s this?” he asked. “Where did you come from?”
He went inside, passing carefully through the door hanging off its hinges. The windows were shattered. Grass and weeds grew up through the warped wooden floor. The roof had partially collapsed, and the sun shone through on a pile of leaves that almost reached the ceiling. At the top of the leaf pile, a golden flower had bloomed, stretching toward the sunlight streaming through the exposed rafters.
“It’s perfect,” he said aloud, although he was very much alone. “Yes, this will do just fine. How strange. How wonderful.”
Giovanni returned bright and early the next morning, his sleeves pushed up his forearms. He knocked down the walls inside the solitary building to create one large room, carrying plaster and wood out piece by piece and piling them on the forest floor. By the time he finished, his face and hair were coated with dust and his joints creaked and groaned, but he was satisfied. There was merit to hard work.
“There,” he said to the birds in the trees as he wiped his face. “Much better. A first step to a new beginning.”
The little building soon became a home for all manner of things: sheets of metal and lengths of wires and cords, batteries of all shapes and sizes, circuit boards and microchips in glass mason jars. Other jars held hundreds of seeds of various shapes, sizes, and colors. There were old music boxes that sang little songs that ached, and silent record players without any records. Televisions, both great and small, their screens dark. And books! So many books on a variety of topics from plant life to whaling, from animals of the forest to complex diagrams of nuclear cores. They lined the new floor-to-ceiling shelving he’d made from the remains of what he’d torn down. It wasn’t until he placed the last book on the last shelf that he realized he himself had nowhere to stay. The room was too full.
It wouldn’t take much to expand the building, adding a room or two. But Giovanni Lawson wasn’t one to take the easy route. He saw the world in complex shapes and designs, and when he looked up at the trees around him, he knew what he would do.
He wouldn’t build outward.
He’d build upward.
It took time, as these things do. Many years passed. It needed to be perfect. There was safety among the trees and away from the harsh, blinding lights and cacophony of the city he’d left behind.
Up in the branches of the trees above the house, he constructed a new little building around the solid trunk of the tallest fir tree, the undisputed king of the forest. From there, he built several more rooms into the trees, all connected by rope bridges—a laboratory and a sunroom, the ceiling made of foggy and scratched glass, the floor of shining oak panels, and no walls. Later this sunroom would become something different.
The forest was vast and wild. He doubted they’d ever be able to find him there.
On sunny days, a herd of deer would graze on the grass below him, and the birds would sing above him. He hummed along with their song. Giovanni was at peace.
At peace until the day his chest began to hurt.
“Oh my,” he said. “What an interesting sensation. It burns.”
In his lab he ran calculations. He typed on his keyboard, the clack, clack, clack echoing flatly around him.
“I see,” he said on the fifty-second day after he’d first felt the ache in his chest. He stared at the screen, checking his numbers. It was loneliness, pure and simple. Numbers never lied.
Three more years went by. Three years of the ache in his chest only growing stronger. Three years of quiet, of longing to hear a voice aside from his own. He would look out the window of his laboratory to see that it was snowing, when just yesterday the forest had been caught in the throes of summer.
On a day that began no differently than all the ones that had come before, two people burst from the trees, their eyes wide in fright, their skin slick with sweat. A man and a woman. The woman clutched a bundle of rags against her chest.
Giovanni startled.
“Help us!” the woman cried. “Please, you must take him. Take him and hide him away. It’s not safe.”
And then she held out the bundle of rags.
Except it wasn’t just rags.
Swaddled tightly inside was a child.
A boy who blinked slowly up at Giovanni before he scrunched up his face and cried.
“What has happened?” Giovanni asked, looking back up at the woman in alarm. “Come, come. I will keep you safe. All of you.”
But the woman shook her head. “They will find us.” Tears trickled down her cheeks as she stepped forward, kissing the baby on the forehead. “I love you. I’ll return when I’m able.”
The man said, “Hurry. They’re coming.”
The woman laughed bitterly. “I know. I know. They always do, in the end.”
The man grabbed her by the hand and pulled her away, away, away.
“Wait!” Giovanni called after them. “His name!”
But they were gone.
He never saw anyone else. No one ever came looking for the man and the woman. Or the child. And he never saw the man and woman again.
Later, much later when the boy was grown, Giovanni would tell the boy that the woman—his mother—hadn’t wanted to leave him. “She will come back,” Giovanni would tell him. “One day, when all is well, she will return.”
Until then, he had desired a child, and now here one was. Oh, how fortuitous! How wonderful!
Giovanni took his time in deciding a designation for the baby. It was when the leaves were changing from green to red and gold that he found the perfect one.
“Victor,” he told his son. “Your name shall be Victor. Victor Lawson. What do you think?”
The loneliness he’d felt—massive and profound—was chased away as if it’d never existed at all.
Giovanni worried when Victor grew and grew and grew, but still didn’t speak. He knew Victor listened to him when he spoke, could see the way the boy understood.
“Is there a fault in your coding?” Giovanni asked him when the boy was four years old. “Did I make a mistake?”
Victor didn’t respond. Instead, he lifted his arms, opening and closing his hands, his little fingers tapping against his palms.
Giovanni did as he was asked. He lifted Victor, hugging him gently against his chest. Victor made a small noise that Giovanni took as happiness, his small face pressed against the man’s chest. “No,” Giovanni said. “You are as you’re supposed to be. I shouldn’t have questioned that. If there was ever perfection in this world, it would be you.” His chest ached once more, but it was for entirely different reasons. Giovanni didn’t need to calculate what he felt now. He knew what it was.
It was love.
And although Giovanni wished more than anything that Victor would speak to him, he let it go. If it was meant to be, it would happen.
It was another two years before Victor spoke for the first time.
They were in the laboratory. Victor was sitting on the floor. Laid out around him were small metal rods. It took Giovanni a moment to recognize the shape Victor had made them into. Two stick figures, one big, one small, their hands joined together. Grunting once, he reached out to fiddle with the legs of the stick figures.
And then the boy—Victor Lawson, son of Giovanni Lawson—said, “You.” He pointed toward the bigger stick figure. “Me.” The smaller stick figure. His voice was quiet, rough from lack of use. But it was there all the same.
“Yes,” Giovanni said quietly. “You and me. Always.”
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TJ Klune
TJ KLUNE is the New York Times and USA Today bestselling, Lambda Literary Award-winning author of The House in the Cerulean Sea, Under the Whispering Door, In the Lives of Puppets, and the Green Creek Series for adults, the Extraordinaries Series for teens, and more. Being queer himself, Klune believes it's important—now more than ever—to have accurate, positive queer representation in stories.
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Customer reviews
4.6 out of 5
53,357 global ratings
BhamGhostwriter
5
Delightfully Queer "Take" On The Wizard of Oz {kinda ;-}
Reviewed in the United States on May 12, 2024
Verified Purchase
T J Klune has, over the last - what? - ten years become one of my very favorite queer writers. IN THE LIVES OF PUPPETS is simply "over the top" fabulous :-}
Young Vic, presumably the last human on earth (after the A.I. androids & robots THOUGHT they had wiped out all human existence), lives deep in the green woods with his loving mechanical father Gio, snarky, electronic "comic relief" Nurse Ratched (though "she" proves throughout the book that "she" is much more than "comic relief,") and the lovable but nearly clueless "Roomba Vacuum" robot, Rambo. This is a loving dystopian family if ever there was one.
The story really begins to come together when Vic, Nurse Ratched (short for Registered Automaton To Care, Heal, Educate and Drill) and Rambo find, in the "scrapyard," the remains of a barely surviving human-like Android labeled "Hap" whom they take home with them. After some time Vic is able make Hap "whole" again. But, in digging out Hap's "body," Vic cut himself and accidentally left a few drops of his blood on the scrap heap from where he dug Hap out. Then "all hell breaks loose." Their family home in the forest is totally destroyed by the A. I. Androids and Gio is kidnapped, taken to Electric City, "brainwashed," and put back to his old purpose of stomping out any signs of humanity.
What follows is an eventful and sometimes scary trip to Electric City (I'm kinda thinking of Dorothy's trip to see the WIZARD OF OZ here?) ending with a "turning point" meeting with the all knowing but very frightening "Blue Fairy" {think OZ ;-}
Though not really a "gay" novel, a really sweet asexual "romance" develops between Hap and Vic during the last 2/3 of the novel and the two boys find themselves sleeping together every night toward the end of the book.
A really beautiful novel and totally worth the 5 star reviews on Amazon.
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NS
5
Excellent
Reviewed in the United States on August 9, 2024
Verified Purchase
Excellent
Natasha Bree
5
One of my favorite books
Reviewed in the United States on May 27, 2024
Verified Purchase
In the Lives of Puppets is now one of my favorite books. It was beautifully written. It was hilarious right from the start. The characters were immediately lovable. All the characters all had such different personalities but such a strong bond. Love knows no bounds in this book. This book made me giddy, it made me happy, made me laugh way more than any book I have read before, and it also made me sob my eyeballs out. This book is about found family, it’s about loyalty, love, and growth. It’s about learning to be who you are and who you want to be rather than what society tells you to be.
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