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York: The Shadow Cipher audiobook

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York: The Shadow Cipher Audiobook Summary

“The pleasures of the novel go far beyond the crackling, breathless plot and the satisfaction of watching the puzzle fall into place. The book is shot through with humor, both laugh-out-loud and subtle.” New York Times Book Review

From National Book Award finalist and Printz Award winner Laura Ruby comes an epic alternate history series about three kids who try to solve the greatest mystery of the modern world: a puzzle and treasure hunt laid into the very streets and buildings of New York City.

It was 1798 when the Morningstarr twins arrived in New York with a vision for a magnificent city: towering skyscrapers, dazzling machines, and winding train lines, all running on technology no one had ever seen before.

Fifty-seven years later, the enigmatic architects disappeared, leaving behind for the people of New York the Old York Cipher–a puzzle laid into the shining city they constructed, at the end of which was promised a treasure beyond all imagining. By the present day, however, the puzzle has never been solved, and the greatest mystery of the modern world is little more than a tourist attraction.

Tess and Theo Biedermann and their friend Jaime Cruz live in a Morningstarr apartment–until a real estate developer announces that the city has agreed to sell him the five remaining Morningstarr buildings. Their likely destruction means the end of a dream long held by the people of New York.

And if Tess, Theo, and Jaime want to save their home, they have to prove that the Old York Cipher is real. Which means they have to solve it.

“An epic mission to solve one of the greatest mysteries of their time. I loved this book. It is full of twists and turns” (from the Brightly.com review, which named York: The Shadow Cipher one of the best books of 2017).

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York: The Shadow Cipher Audiobook Narrator

Adam Verner is the narrator of York: The Shadow Cipher audiobook that was written by Laura Ruby

Laura Ruby is the author of books for adults, teens, and children, including Thirteen Doorways, Wolves Behind Them All and the Michael L. Printz Medal winner Bone Gap, both National Book Award finalists; the Edgar Award nominee Lily’s Ghosts; and the Book Sense Pick Good Girls as well as the first two books in the York Saga. She is on the faculty of Hamline University’s MFA in writing for children and young adults program and lives in the Chicago area. You can visit her online at www.lauraruby.com.


About the Author(s) of York: The Shadow Cipher

Laura Ruby is the author of York: The Shadow Cipher

York: The Shadow Cipher Full Details

Narrator Adam Verner
Length 10 hours 14 minutes
Author Laura Ruby
Category
Publisher Walden Pond Press
Release date May 16, 2017
ISBN 9780062682789

Subjects

The publisher of the York: The Shadow Cipher is Walden Pond Press. includes the following subjects: The BISAC Subject Code is Juvenile Fiction, Mysteries & Detective Stories

Additional info

The publisher of the York: The Shadow Cipher is Walden Pond Press. The imprint is Walden Pond Press. It is supplied by Walden Pond Press. The ISBN-13 is 9780062682789.

Global Availability

This book is only available in the United States.

Goodreads Reviews

Betsy

April 25, 2017

A wise bookseller friend of mine once said (and I’m paraphrasing here because she bloody tweets too often to locate the precise words), “If you work in a bookstore you are only allowed to invoke The Westing Game three times. The first time I did it for Greenglass House by Kate Milford. The second time will go to Laura Ruby’s York." Naturally a librarian reads something like that and their radar starts beeping like mad. A Westing Game invocation is no small matter. And as luck would have it I had a copy of Laura Ruby's very book on my shelf. Sorta. I mean, coming in at a whopping 448 pages I’d sort of assumed that it was YA. I was not without reason. Laura Ruby has written middle grade in the past but at this precise moment in time is probably better known for books like the National Book Award / Printz Award winning young adult novel The Bone Gap. It can also be unwise to have one’s own expectations raised so incredibly high when starting a new novel. They are inevitably going to be dashed Imagine New York City in the early 19th century. Imagine what would have happened if it had been home to two genius twins. Twins capable of inventing mechanical creations that eliminated waste, used special glass to harness the sun’s energy, and more. Twins who remade the city in their image and created a code in its very streets. Find the code and a treasure is yours. Simple, right? Only no one ever solved it. Now it is modern day and two different twins and a friend in their beloved building have discovered that a greedy real estate developer has bought their home and is mere months away from kicking them out. All seems lost until a mysterious letter arrives. It appears that while the Morningstar twins of long ago did create a cipher for the city to solve, there may have been more than one line of clues to follow. Using their brains, their feet, and more than a little bravery, the three kids set out to solve the mystery and save their building. Yet as they do they come to an unnerving realization. This isn’t just the city that never sleeps. It’s a city that takes pleasure in watching YOU sleep.Laura Ruby, the author, does not live in New York City. I knew this going into the book. I, on the other hand, lived there for eleven years so I’m very attuned to writers getting that city wrong in their fiction. For example, I once read an otherwise admirable middle grade mystery serious where three of the scenes in the book took place in alleyways in Museum Mile. Do I need to tell you that NYC has no alleys and, even if we did, they certainly wouldn’t be on Museum Mile? And one could argue that since Ms. Ruby is dealing with an alternate world Manhattan (the book is primarily set in Manhattan, though there is a very amusing glimpse of Brooklyn in one of the scenes) that she needn’t be so tied to the reality of the city. One could argue that, and one would be wrong. As far as I’m concerned you do the city then you do the research. So I picked up this book and within, I’m gonna say, three chapters I was convinced that Ms. Ruby must have a second secret life in the heart of the Big Apple that she’s let no one know about. Accurate to the city? Baby, you don’t even know the half of it. Okay, here’s just how well Ms. Ruby captures NYC: In one scene our characters are having a discussion when in walks my own kids’ former preschool, Sunshine Daycare. It’s THAT on the nose with the details. Snafus are of the tiny variety. For example, the A train does appear in this story to be an elevated stop at 116th Street when, in fact, that’s actually the 1 train, but I’ll let it lie. And reading this book I was both floored and suddenly hit with a wave of nostalgia. I may not have encountered rollers and Guildmen in my time there, but this is so clearly a love letter to a city I adore that it’s bound to accrue new fans in its travels. After all, it may involve mechanical cleaning caterpillars but this New York also finds the notion of peas in guacamole a crime against mankind. As is right.Interestingly, this alternate world does retain a fair number of pop culture references. So you’ll see mentions of Spider-Man, Legos, Godzilla, etc. I appreciated this. For whatever reason it drives me batty when authors make up fake names for video games or comic book characters. Ms. Ruby even works in a couple Hamilton references, with a mention of Hercules Mulligan and Eliza Hamilton’s life and achievements. There is the occasional made up thing. Angry Bots instead of Angry Birds, for example. And for some reason there are multiple references to The Matrix though it’s never directly named. Still, all told for the most part the book keeps you grounded in reality.Jokes. No one ever praises jokes enough. Be serious all you want but a good joke can be worth its weight in gold. Laura Ruby puts a wide array of them in this book. There are the subtle ones that make a comment on our own New York by praising this hypothetical one (example: “… and they could watch for schools of fish darting through the clear blue water of the Hudson”). And like a lot of my favorite children’s fiction, it has jokes that are going to lead to kids looking up further information, just so that they can stay in the know. For example, at one point a kindly therapist asks why Tess draws crows over her heads when she sketches and her reply is, “That’s not a crown… That’s a nimbus of outrage.” My favorite, however, may be Theo’s shirt that says “Schrodinger’s cat is dead” on the front and then a zombie cat on the back with the line, “Schrodinger’s cat is ALIIIIIIVE.” I will be seeking this t-shirt out to buy presently. And for the record, I’m pretty sure there are a lot of references in this book I wasn’t getting. One of the cipherists met in the book is named Omar Khayyam. In light of that I’m fairly certain that Ray Turnage, Adrian Birch, and Imogen Sparks also have meanings worth discovering.Of course making it funny is all well and good, and you could have a whole novel built on the excitement of the premise alone. Still, when you meet an author that isn’t afraid to delve a little deeper and say something about humanity in a children’s book, that’s pretty neat. As a result, I took note of a lot of really insightful lines peppered throughout the chapters. Things like, “The biggest problem we have is that people like to fool themselves into thinking that they could never be fooled.” Or someone feeling a sense of relief and, “letting out a rush of breath that felt like the pulling of a splinter.” And for some reason I was really moved by a character with dementia hugging an animal and crying for their dog. When told they never had a dog they respond, “I miss the dog I never had.” Now let’s talk about how you set up a mystery novel for kids. There are two ways to go about it. I call the two options The Agatha Christie and The Chasing Vermeer. The Agatha Christie model is the hardest to pull off. You give your readers all the facts, lay them out plain and clear, and let them solve the mystery alongside you. When done well this engages the reader and makes them complicit in the solution. Instant audience identification! Brilliant! Then you have The Chasing Vermeer method. Now the book Chasing Vermeer was very popular with kids, so you can’t knock it on that account. It was, however, a book where the mystery and solution was based entirely on coincidences. That’s a frustrating way to set up a novel, and The Shadow Cipher isn’t entirely innocent of this methodology. Early on we learn that as you solve the cipher it solves you. Well that’s awfully convenient. It allows for all kinds of coincidences to occur, from finding the right letter at the right time to solving a part of the cipher mere days before the proposed destruction of the characters’ beloved home. Yet for all that, you get the feeling that Ms. Ruby is playing pretty fair with you. Kids will feel pleased to figure out that a mechanical moth is responsible for the partial blackout in town. They may realize what the twins are doing running around keeping track of the position of one star or another in their building. As a result this book is sort of a combination of the best elements of The Agatha Christie and Chasing Vermeer methods put together. I could have done with less coincidences, but at least they’re interstitial.Creating alternate Americas is not a job for the lazy. I’ve seen it done well in children’s books and I’ve seen it done magnificently catastrophically poorly. Take, for example, the case of The Thirteenth Child by Patricia Wrede, or, as it was known during its publication, “Mammothgate”. In 2009 author Wrede wanted to write a story of an alternate U.S. where magic existed and there had never been a Land Bridge to the North American continent. To avoid pesky racial politics the author had simply erased the Land Bridge and said that there weren’t any Native Americans at all in her fantasy world. Sticky racial politics gone, right? But exchanging mammoths for American Indians (hence the term “Mammothgate”) even in a fantasy is little more than a quick erasing of an entire race simply because they’re inconvenient to your plot. Since the brouhaha that erupted from those choices other authors have tread more carefully. Matthew Kirby in The Lost Kingdom incorporated American Indians into much of his plot (even as he reduced female protagonists to mere fainting females). And here, Laura Ruby could have ignored Native Americans entirely. Or, she could have kept their history identical to that of the real America. Instead, Ruby makes the choice to give them different outcomes. At one point in the background we see an Embassy of the Five Hundred Nations, “flying the colorful flags of First Nations from the Abenaki to the Comanche, Pawnee to the Sioux.” We see Native teens dropping lyrics on the street. Later a mention is made of a fictional superhero named “Super Indian” which, quite frankly, doesn’t exactly sound all that different from the real world Apache Chief. It reminds me of the old Harvey Birdman show where Black Lightning is complaining to Aquaman about his name. When Aquaman doesn’t get the problem Black Lightning says, “How would you like it if I called you White Fish?” Same diff. As odd as it may seem, the book that this reminded me of the most wasn’t the aforementioned Westing Game or Greenglass House but rather The Invention of Hugo Cabret by Brian Selznick. In both cases you have kids encountering old technology with a secret locked inside, just waiting to be revealed. You also have cases where the villain is almost just as much circumstances as it is a big bad guy. I don’t think I’m spoiling much to tell you that the real estate developer with the bad hair who only dates models and is buying up much of NYC (and has five letters in his name, and, and, and…) never makes a physical appearance on these pages. Not this time around. I suspect as the years go by and these books continue to be published we will find ourselves hoping against hope for him to be defeated in a particularly satisfying manner.Greatest Objection to This Book: No libraries. I shall expect this problem to be rectified in future installments. Ditto trips to Staten Island, Queens, and the poor much ignored Bronx. I have a dream that someday someone will set a mystery or fantasy in the Bronx and at long last that borough shall have its due.It is one thing to want to write a scavenger hunt. It another thing to set that hunt in a world so like and unalike our own. And when you go even further and pepper your story’s inherent excitement with eloquence, your final product doesn’t shine. It glows from within. The Shadow Cipher glows. Oh sure, I would have changed stuff here and there, but on the whole the book is strong, sturdy and for all that it’s over 400 pages it’s pretty unputdownable. It won’t matter if a kid knows Manhattan like the back of their hand or has never even seen 5th Avenue firsthand. The city today is just like the city in this book. It’s a puzzle, and every person that visits it attempts to solve that puzzle for themselves. I don’t know what the future holds for future installments of this series, but I do know that NYC should hire Ms. Ruby as their current publicist. A graceful paean to the best of Manhattan, and a shocking, gripping, nail-biting, intriguing mystery for fans of codes, ciphers, puzzles, and treasure.For ages 9-14.

Ashley

August 09, 2017

This was so so so so so good! The pacing overall was pretty slow, but the story was so interesting that I didn't have any problems with it! Middle grade meets National Treasure: ITS ALL I'VE EVER WANTED! And THERE ARE GOING TO BE MORE BOOKS? So so SO pumped.

Suzzie

July 10, 2017

This book was a pretty fun adventure. I loved that Laura Ruby put in a lot of little facts about New York with a combination of fantasy and made up stuff also. It made for a good read with three very likeable three main characters.

Jessica

June 28, 2017

I'm not the sort of person who refers to books at "tales" or calls myself (or other authors) a "storyteller." I'm a writer. You're a writer. We're writers. Authors or writers.Except for Laura Ruby. Nope, she's a storyteller. This is a wonderful story, unlike anything you've seen before, and she's telling it to you. I feel the same way about her wonderful, award-winning BONE GAP. Years later I still remember that story. Not the words. The story. This is the same. I don't really remember the words of this, but I can feel and imagine the story of this book. It's wonderful. It's mysterious. It's adventurous. It's funny. It's scary. Just like any good story, told by a skilled storyteller.

Lieblingsleseplatz

March 04, 2018

Aufgrund des Klappentextes hätte ich nie erahnt, was für ein Feuerwerk an Ereignissen und Wortwitz mich erwartet…Die Handlung spielt in einem fiktiven New York unserer Zeit. Da im 19. Jahrhundert die genialen Erfinder Theresa und Theodore Morningstar New York bereits sehr technologisiert hatten finden sich im heutigen York eine mysteriöse Underway Bahn, Tiere aus abenteuerlichen Kreutzungen und Roboter die das Leben angenehmer gestalten (Ich will auch einen Lancelot!!!)Jedoch nicht jeder weiß das Erbe der Morningstar Zwillinge zu schätzen. Der skrupellose Darnell Slant kauft alle alten Morningstar Gebäude systematisch auf um sie dem Erdboden gleich zu machen……so auch das Gebäude Nr. 354 West 73. Straße. Ist es ein Zufall, dass im alten Zuhause der Morningstars nun eine Familie wohnt, deren 12 jährige Zwillinge dieselben Vornamen haben wie Theodore und Theresa Morningstar? Und was hat es mit der mysteriösen Erbin der Morningstars – Miss Ava Oneal – auf sich, von der kein einziges Foto überliefert ist? Auch kann es kein Zufall sein, dass genau an dem Tag, als die Bewohner des Hauses 354 West 73. Straße den Räumungs-Beschluss zugestellt bekommen, ein Brief in die Hände von Tess und Theo gelangt, der darauf hin deutet, dass es hinter dem Code den die Menschen von York seit Jahrzehnten versuchen zu knacken einen weiteren Code gibt – einen Schattencode, der sie womöglich zu dem großen Schatz der Morningstars führt und die Rettung ihres Zuhauses bedeuten könnte.Theo – ist Pedant. Ein Mathegenie. Und er liebt Lego. Was er nicht liebt sind Veränderungen wie die, dass er womöglich bald seine Lego-Nachbildung des Towers wo anders aufbauen musss.„Viele Leute lesen nicht gern“, gab Jamie zu bedenken. „warum nicht?“, fragte Theo.Tess – ist das komplette Gegenteil ihres rationellen Zwillingsbruders – leidenschaftlich, impulsiv und mit einem leichten Hang zum Drama. Für sie bedeutet es den Weltuntergang schlechthin das fast schon lebendig anmutende Gebäude verlassen zu müssen und vielleicht sogar ganz aus der Stadt weg ziehen zu müssen.„Ich finde es interessant, dass du dich immer selbst mit dieser kleinen goldenen Krone auf dem Kopf zeichnest.“ (…) „Das ist keine Krone“, hatte sie ihm erklärt. „Das ist ein Kranz der Empörung!“Zusammen bilden sie eine Einheit, die nur ganz schwer von Außenstehenden zu durchdringen ist. Sie ergänzen sich in ihren Eigenheiten. Sogar ihre eigene Geheimsprache haben sie entwickelt. Das ist auch der Grund, warum Jamie, der genauso alt ist wie Jess und Theo noch nie was mit ihnen am Hut hatte.„Wenn man Euch zuhört, ist das manchmal, als ob man merkwürdiger ausländischer Musik lauscht“ warf Jamie ein. „Neu und interessant, aber nichts wozu jeder tanzen kann.“Jamie – ist Künstler. Er hat ein einzigartiges Gedächtnis und versteht es mit wenigen Strichen eine Szene perfekt einzufangen. Am allerliebsten zeichnet er Superhelden. Er will seinen einen Superhelden erfinden – doch zunächst will er auch sein Zuhause – und damit die Arbeitssstelle seiner Grandma, die Hausmeisterin in 354 West 73. Straße ist -vor der Abrißbirne retten.Gemeinsam mit der Hybrid-Katze Nine Eighty-Seven (der sicher in einem weiteren Band noch eine spezielle Rolle zuteil wird) bilden sie eine Zwangsallianz um den Code zu knacken und mit dem Schatz das Haus der Morningstars – ihr Zuhause – zu retten. Eine aufregende Schitzeljad durch, über und unter New York beginnt …Den Stil von Laura Ruby kann man nicht mit humorvoll beschreiben. Nein. Er ist genial witzig! Knappe Sätze und hohe Schlagzahl an intelligenten Gags machen richtig Laune beim lesen. Die Sprache ist bunt und malt wunderbare Bilder von einem futuristischen New York das ich so selbst gerne besuchen würde!Das Setting des fiktiven New York ist wunderbar bildlich gelungen. Mit einer Prise Steampunk, einem Archiv der Codisten das an Warehouse 13 erinnert und einer Handlung die Goonies Fans vor Freude tanzen lässt. Ich vergebe absolut verdiente 5 von 5 Lieblingslesesessel für Chroniken von York – Die Suche nach dem Schattencode!Der Verlag empfiehlt das Buch ab 12 – ich meine, dass es aber auch durchaus für jüngere Abenteurer hervorragend ist – besonders auch zum Vorlesen ruhig ab 8. Natürlich muss man dem komplexen Plot folgen, aber ich glaube das geht schon ganz gut in der dritten Klasse. Was es aber für Jugendliche und und Erwachsene nicht weniger spannend macht. Im Gegenteil!Ein Wort noch zum Ende: Bösester Cliffhanger ever oder genialster Schluss aller Zeiten? Ich bin mir nicht sicher… aber ich möchte unbedingt ganz bald eine Fortsetzung der Chroniken von York!!! Absolute Lese-Empfehlung!

Carolin

March 04, 2018

4.5 Sterne.Mochte es wirklich gerne. Unterhaltsam. Nett. Gut ausgearbeitet. (:Einfach rasant und abwechslungsreich, genau richtig.

Skip

June 30, 2017

Tess and Theo Biederman and friend, Jaime Cruz, live in a Morningstar building in New York City. The Morningstar twins came to New York City in the 1800’s and revolutionized the city with engineering feats, such as solar energy, servant robots, skyscrapers, elevators that don’t just go up and down, but sideways, beetle-machines that clean, and an expansive subway system. Then, they vanished, leaving behind a trail of clues to inherit their secrets. Great world-building, and the three feel compelled to find answers when real estate magnate Darrell Slant evict all residents of their building. Unfortunately, I did not think the puzzles and ciphers were all that interesting, nor did I think the logic in solving them made sense. The story and characters fell short, and nothing, except the world-building and mysterious Ava, were compelling. 3.75 stars.

Abby

June 04, 2017

This book!!Set in an alternate New York City, three kids race against the clock to solve a cipher designed by the city's greatest architects and inventors, the Morningstarrs. Though it's a hefty tome, this mystery is full of twists and turns as three kids discover a new clue that takes them down a path of alternate clues to solve the cipher. I am not normally a big mystery fan, but I loved the details in the setting - the interesting inventions from the Morningstarrs that resulted in an alternate New York City. This is a very rich story and one that I had a hard time putting down. I would suggest this to tweens who like an immersive mystery story, like Greenglass House or Chasing Vermeer.

Kim

November 30, 2019

This book was fantastic! Great page turner with enough drudgery between to slow down your brain in anticipation of the next clue. The story revolves around a set of twins and their neighbor trying to solve a riddle to save their apartment building. My summary pales in comparison to the actual novel: the clues, the characters, the magic within. I’m certainly glad there is a sequel.

Prince William Public Libraries

February 22, 2021

York: The Shadow Cipher, by Laura Ruby, is the story of three teenagers who set out on a quest to save the only homes they have ever known. Twins Theo and Tess Biedermann, along with Jamie Cruz, must solve a centuries-old puzzle called the Old York Cipher. Created by the legendary Morningstarrs sometime in the 19th century, the Cipher has remained unsolved for over 150 years, though many have tried and failed. After an uber-rich real estate developer buys their apartment building and wants to tear it down, their last hope is to solve the Cipher and find the treasure, so that they can afford to buy back their apartment building. There are some important things that tie the twins to Jamie. Both the Biedermann and Cruz families live in the same apartment building, managed by Jamie’s grandmother. Another thing that establishes a connection between the three of them is that although we are given relatively little information about their past, we learn that they were all considered social misfits at school from a young age. This last statement foreshadows one of the main lessons of the novel, that you can never judge a book by its cover. These kids, considered to be awkward, go on a wild and exciting adventure that many of their “cooler” peers will never go on during their entire lives. And finally, the building has a significant emotional meaning to all of them. It has been their home for most of their lives, and they are forced to make hard decisions that are the difference between the building’s survival, or its destruction. I would recommend this book because of the way it is written. The author combines a strong frame with an exciting plot, ending with a cliffhanger that will make readers pick up the sequel.-Ethan K., PWPL Teen ReaderClick here to find the book at the Prince William Public Libraries.

Cori

October 05, 2017

So much fun! I just love Laura Ruby's writing. In this book she makes a lot of changes to New York, but it retains the essence of the city. An awesome middle grade that's definitely worth your while!

Chelsea

November 08, 2017

4.5This was a sweet mystery about three children who want to try and save there apartment. And so Tess, Theo, Jamie, and a big cat go around New York looking for answers. Where no 7th graders should go alone but hey this is there city so who knows.This book was told in each of the children POV which was easy to get because it was changed for each chapter. The narrator was done by Adam Verner and he did a wonderful job putting a difference between each voice. For a 10 hour audio this one went fast and kept me interested the whole time. I loved how they each had a role to play, Jamie drew out when they found a new thing. While Theo was the textbook giving the history. And Tess she is also very smart, but also can lie the best out of the three of them. Also the friendship is sweet for they all are fighting for a common cause and that's so no one would leave the only home they know. Plus the twins have a giant cat who is everything. She goes along with most of there adventure. She keeps Tess calm and scare off baddies what's not to love. Where the puzzles took them was basically all around New York from the Statue of Liberty, to visit Alexander Hamilton, to get on crazy trains, and even go under ground. There was plenty twist and turns some obvious, but there was plenty of them to keep me going into the end. Alas cliffhangers are not fun, because that ending makes me want the next book which isn't until next year.

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