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World Famous Comics: Marie, Dancing
Marie, Dancing
By: Carolyn Meyer
Publisher: Harcourt Paperbacks
Average Rating:4.50 out of 5.00 stars
Binding: Paperback
Label: Harcourt Paperbacks
Number of Items: 1
Number of Pages: 272
Publication Date: May 01, 2007
Reading Level: Young Adult

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Marie, Dancing
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Editorial Comments

Product Description:
Marie van Goethem, a fourteen-year-old ballet dancer in the Paris Opéra, has led a life of hardship and poverty. For her, dancing is the only joy to counter the pain inflicted by hunger, her mother's drinking, and her selfish older sister. When famed artist Edgar Degas demands Marie's presence in his studio, it appears that her life will be transformed: He will pay her to pose for a new sculpture, and he promises to make her a star. But will being Degas's model really bring Marie all she hopes for?
     Includes a reader's guide and an author's note.



Customer Reviews
Average Rating:4.50 out of 5.00 stars

4 out of 5 starsMarie et Monsieur Degas
A nice book, about the young dancer who posed for Degas' (in)famous statue, La Petite Danseuse de quartorze ans. Written by the prominent historical fiction writer for kids and teens, Carolyn Meyer, the trademarks of her writing weave sucessfully throughout the engrossing story she paints in Marie, Dancing. As is usual (and one of the things I like about Carolyn Meyer!), the book is based on history (Edgar Degas, and Mary Cassatt being the most famous characters you'll encounter,) and I actually learned quite a bit. I had no idea that Degas' model's name was actually known, let alone some details, however sparse, about her life as well. The afterword at the end is nice. Although the story isn't too "grabbing" and drags a bit at times, I greatly appreciated how some things DID turn out wrong, and there were no "happy surprises." It was a pleasant change from the usual cliche love stories. So while Marie, Dancing stands out among Carolyn Meyer's works, I still didn't enjoy it the way I enjoyed her books on royalty. Those were really quite nice, and I wish she'd write more! However I have one complaint about Carolyn Meyer's works. She always exaggerates the romance! There's always some kind of florid physical love theme lurking behind every couple in her books. She tends to overdo it with the kissing and hugging, I think. Not that there's anything graphic in any of her books, it's quite "clean", but I don't care for how in every single book there's some ridiculous romance. Of course I am a sucker for a good love story (or a not so good one!) so I really don't mind them, but I'm sure the books would be fine without them. Ah, but I've trailed of my topic now, haven't I? Well, simply read Marie, Dancing, see what you think. It made pleasant reading, passing the hours one summer day for me. I hope you find it equally enjoyable.

~E. Povroskaya



5 out of 5 stars...makes the reader feel as if they are flying through the air, alongside Marie, performing flawless cabrioles!
The year is 1878. Fourteen-year-old Marie van Goethem has dreamed of nothing but becoming a sujet in the Paris Opera since she first joined the company years ago. And now, at the age of 14-years-old, Marie feels that she has the potential to do just that. However, just as she is basking in the glow of feeling light on her feet, she is picked out of her class by none other than prized Parisian painter, Edward Degas. Degas is a regular fixture in Marie's dance classes. Always sketching the dancers in various positions, from pointe to simply lacing their slippers, or adjusting their tutus. But Degas has other plans for Marie. For, as soon as she accompanies him to his studio, she learns that Degas plans on using Marie as the model for his one, and only, sculpture, entitled Petite danseuse de quatorze ans (Little Dancer Aged Fourteen). Marie is only too happy to comply with Monsieur Degas's wishes, for her family has struck poverty since her father passed away, and she could use the money to provide food for her younger sister, Charlotte. Money that her mother drinks away, and her older sister, Antoinette, spends on frivolous items, such as fancy stockings. However, as the years pass, and Marie is no longer summoned by Monsieur Degas, she realizes that she needs to find another way to make some extra money, in an attempt to follow her deceased father's wishes, and provide for her beloved family. And, at both her mother's, and Antoinette's request (and demands), Marie begins following the same path Antoinette has paved for her, attending the foyer de la danse. But when Marie's conscience rebels against what is expected of her at foyer de la danse, and Antoinette stumbles into a bout of trouble, Marie decides to change her path in life, in an attempt to create the home she always wanted for her younger sister; and hold her oft-times troubled family together.

I did a report about Degas's Little Dancer Aged Fourteen earlier this year for an art class. Therefore, when I came across it at Barnes & Noble, and received a recommendation from Carolyn Meyer herself regarding MARIE, DANCING, I couldn't pass it up. As someone who has adored ballet since the time I could walk, I found MARIE, DANCING to be an original, awe-inspiring addition to the historical fiction world. One that would intrigue even those who don't hold an interest in ballet. While MARIE, DANCING gives random facts about the illustrious sculpture created by Degas, it surrounds itself more around Marie's troubled, poverty-stricken life, and the struggles she must endure in an attempt to keep both her own head, and that of her siblings and mother, above water. Through Marie's eyes, readers are taken on a journey through five-years of Marie's life. From her time dancing at the Paris Opera, to her modeling job with Degas', and the unveiling of Little Dancer Aged Fourteen, all the way through her troubles with her family, and Antoinette's rebellion. MARIE, DANCING brings about the not-so-glitzy Parisian life that many suffered through in the late 1800's, showing readers the ups and downs of the dancing world, and the sacrifices those who were unfortunate enough to be poverty-stricken faced on a daily basis. A mesmerizing piece of fiction that makes the reader feel as if they are flying through the air, alongside Marie, performing flawless cabrioles!

Erika Sorocco
Freelance Reviewer



5 out of 5 starsCourtesy of Teens Read Too
I can't count the times that I've seen a truly inspiring painting or sculpture and wondered what the inspiration behind it was. With MARIE, DANCING, the story behind Edgar Degas's well known sculpture, Little Dancer Aged Fourteen, is brought to vivid life in this fictionalized account.

At fourteen, Marie van Goethem still holds out hope that one day her life will be, if not grand, then better than it is now. Her drunken mother is unable to hold down a job, and the place where they're forced to live can only be described as squalor. Marie knows their family--made up of Mother, Tante Helene, older sister Antoinette, and younger sister Charlotte--are poor and destitute. The only thing that brings joy to Marie's life is dancing in the Paris Opera. Ballet is her life, along with the life of both of her sisters, enrolled under the tutelage of Madame Theodore at the ballet school.

Things soon change, though, for Marie and her entire family. Antoinette is being wooed by much older, and much wealthier men, and although she promises to send them money when she's set up as a mistress by her benefactor, she never does. But when Marie meets Edgar Degas and he asks her to pose for him, Marie prays that her life is about to change forever.

And change it does, but not in the ways she had suspected. Mother is still drinking, Charlotte is the only girl of the three who shows real promise as a dancer who can make it her career, and her love interest, Jean-Pierre, has asked her to wait for him while he makes a name and a home for the two of them. It's only within the safety and glory of Degas's studio, or while on the stage of the Opera that Marie feels secure that her life will improve--until the day she's dismissed from the School, Antoinette asks her to play nursemaid to her unborn child, and Jean-Pierre asks her to move away from Paris, the only home she's ever known.

Carolyn Meyer has brought the world of Paris, art, and dance to vivid life in MARIE, DANCING. This is a story of a girl who only wants a better life, some small pleasure within this dreary existence. And although posing for Degas doesn't change Marie's life in the way she had planned, it definitely does change it more than she could have ever dared hope or imagine.



4 out of 5 starsWonderful and poignant...
I've been enjoying Carolyn Meyer's Young Royals series. I have book three of the aforementioned series lined up for a read, but decided to give Marie, Dancing a whirl this time. This wonderful novel is based on the Victorian work of art of Degas's controversial sculpture called The Little Dancer. This tells the story of a penniless French family and the daughters whose only hope and happiness in life is that they are students at the Paris Opera Ballet. For Marie van Goethem, being part of the Paris Opera Ballet is the best thing in her life. At home, she has an alcoholic mother and shattered dreams due to their impoverished conditions to look forward to. Her dreams of success will come with many obstacles, including endless suitors and a proposition to pose for a sculpture in order to put food on the table, but Marie will be content if at least one of her sisters, Antoinette and Charlotte, realizes her dream of becoming a dancer. There are some twists in the novel.

This is a moving and compelling story of a young woman who will do anything to help her family and get them through their difficult times. Marie is such a fighter for someone so young. The descriptions of their conditions and the struggles with an alcoholic mother are quite vivid here. Marie's outcome is a realistic one that makes the reader wonder if a person of limited means could rise above the social and financial obstacles and succeed in life or if you're destined for a life of misery or mediocrity at best. It also makes the reader wonder if, despite the aforementioned obstacles, you can succeed in changing your life if you put your mind and determination to it. Meyer took a quite a famous and controversial sculpture (or at least it was controversial when it was first exhibited in 1881) and created a warm, poignant, albeit hopeful story that is beautiful and compelling as well as eloquent and enthralling. This is a young adult book set during the Victorian era targeted for teens between the sixth and ninth grades, but adults could enjoy this as well. I know I loved it! The author has great talent with historical novels and I shall continue to give her stuff a whirl and then pass her work to my niece so that she could read a good story and learn something at the same time.



5 out of 5 starsLa Petite Danseuse
I picked this book off of the shelf the moment I saw the little dancer on the back cover. It is my favorite statue and so I bought it and read it in a day! It was very good,and I recommended it to my cousin. It is sutable for young adults but adults can enjoy it too! It is one of the cutest stories I have read in a long time.


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