cover image The Enchanted Lies of Celeste Artois

The Enchanted Lies of Celeste Artois

Ryan Graudin. Redhook, $30 (544p) ISBN 978-0-316-41869-0

1913 Paris, when the City of Light is about to be darkened by WWI, is the setting for this effervescent fantasy from Graudin (Wolf by Wolf). The Enchantresses, a found family of three young women painters running scams and nesting in the famed Pere Lachaise cemetery, butt up against the pasts that each was trying to escape. Swept into the truly magical world of Le Fée Verte, a man with the power to steal other people’s dreams, each Enchantress discovers her own special ability, putting them at risk of being targeted by Le Fée’s nameless nemesis, a dark wizard. Graudin mixes a heady cocktail of decadent parties with the bittersweet tang of a world about to self-destruct. Cameos from real historical figures, including the lost Russian princess Anastasia and Igor Stravinsky, charm without overshadowing the fictional heroines, and Graudin’s already sparkling prose takes a turn for the poetic whenever magic comes into play (“The drink tasted like the last page of a book falling shut or that last slant of sun escaping through drawn curtains”). This is a delectable confection. Agent: Tracey Adams, Adams Literary. (Aug.)