Ratings4
Average rating3.5
Originally published as Enchantée, All That Glitters is Gita Trelease’s debut fantasy about an orphaned girl who uses dark magic to save her sister and herself is “a soaring success” (NPR)! Paris is a labyrinth of twisted streets filled with beggars and thieves, revolutionaries and magicians. Camille Durbonne is one of them. She wishes she weren’t... When smallpox kills her parents, Camille must find a way to provide for her younger sister while managing her volatile brother. Relying on magic, Camille painstakingly transforms scraps of metal into money to buy food and medicine they need. But when the coins won’t hold their shape and her brother disappears with the family’s savings, Camille pursues a richer, more dangerous mark: the glittering court of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette. Using dark magic forbidden by her mother, Camille transforms herself into a baroness and is swept up into life at the Palace of Versailles, where aristocrats both fear and hunger for magic. As she struggles to reconcile her resentment of the rich with the allure of glamour and excess, Camille meets a handsome young inventor, and begins to believe that love and liberty may both be possible. But magic has its costs, and soon Camille loses control of her secrets. And when revolution erupts, Camille must choose—love or loyalty, democracy or aristocracy, reality or magic—before Paris burns.
Featured Series
2 primary booksEnchantée is a 2-book series with 2 primary works first released in 2019 with contributions by Gita Trelease.
Reviews with the most likes.
I hadn't read a true fantasy with magic in a long time, and was excited to find this fantasy mixed with historical fiction on my bookshelves.
I loved it from the beginning. The romance of France and the reality of the revolution, the double life Camille lives between Paris and Versailles, and the beauty of her friendships and romance alike.
Enchantee has a different kind of magic, and draws you in with every page. With the reality of the times, with revolution, resistance, and sickness, it reveals how easy the aristocrats had it-how they could afford to gamble away their problems.
Magic is hidden in a world full of tradition, and it's fascinating to read this interpretation.
I thoroughly enjoyed this book, and can't wait for the sequel.