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The Hidden World (A Princess of Roumania Book 4) Kindle Edition

3.5 3.5 out of 5 stars 9 ratings


The breathtaking climax to Paul Park's lyrical and mesmerizing series. "Park…should be knighted."--Entertainment Weekly

The Hidden World
is the concluding volume in Paul Park's remarkable tale of Roumania, a world that is both more real and yet also more mysterious and magical than our own.

After finding out that she is the lost princess of Roumania and the mythical White Tyger, Miranda's fate is still uncertain. The ghosts of her enemies cluster about her, the insane spirit of the Baroness takes possession of her body for a time, and demons released by her mother are abroad. And through it all her heart calls out to Peter, away with the army, whom she has come to love, and her best friend Andromeda, sworn to help her and protect her. There are no easy answers; it all looks impossible. Any hope may lie in the hidden world of spirits, where death is but an inconvenience.

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There are 4 books in this series.

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

In this exciting and satisfying fourth and final volume (after 2007's White Tyger) of Park's much praised alternate historical fantasy series, young, clairvoyant Miranda, now revealed as both a lost Roumanian princess and the legendary shape-shifting White Tyger, must avoid the machinations of the corrupt and violent Colonel Bocu and the ghost of wicked Baroness Nicola Ceausescu as she struggles to understand her heritage. Members of the old nobility, not all of them still living, continue to experiment with dangerous and ancient magics they only partially understand. As Roumania begins to flounder in its war against Turkey, dark rumors surface of a terrible and perhaps necromantic final weapon that may destroy the nation. Miranda can depend only on her oldest friends, the young army officer Peter Gross and the gender- and species-shifting Andromeda. This final volume, although beautifully written, does not stand well on its own, but it provides a fitting and triumphant conclusion to the series. (Apr.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

The last of Park’s four novels set in Roumania, an alternate-universe Romania, comes to a satisfying if convoluted conclusion for its adolescent protagonist, Miranda Popescu. Displaced from her native Massachusetts to a bewildering land of arcane magic and warring political factions, Miranda has endured separation from her best friends Peter and Andromeda, while her scheming enemies have blocked her from assuming her rightful place as Roumania’s “White Tyger” princess. Now, with the death of her chief nemesis, Baroness Nicola Ceausescu, and her mother’s final release from a German prison, Miranda must face new adversaries from the spirit world before she can rejoin her friends and return to her Massachusetts home. Park’s preoccupation with intricate Eastern Europe politics and his own befuddling brand of intricate supernaturalism may not appeal to many younger devotees of magically oriented fiction. Yet his complex characterizations and inventive alternate-history scenarios have invited comparisons to the best works of Crowley and LeGuin. At any rate, Miranda is one of the most interesting heroines in contemporary fantasy. --Carl Hays

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B00BFQ6CNC
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Tor Books; Reprint edition (March 3, 2009)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ March 3, 2009
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 829 KB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 384 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    3.5 3.5 out of 5 stars 9 ratings

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Customer reviews

3.5 out of 5 stars
9 global ratings

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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on June 1, 2008
    Up until this final installment, I've probably enjoyed Paul Park's "Princess of Roumania" series as much as anything I've read over the last several years. Park is a wonderful writer, and the characters (and their alternative world counterparts) populating this series, Miranda, Peter, Andromeda, and the towering Nicola Ceausescu (one of the greatest figures of evil in all of literature) are as complex and nuanced as you'll find in any high-end fiction reading experience.

    Still, "The Hidden World" had me asking, around page 160 or so, What is going on? Park's luminous prose totally takes over - at the expense of the story itself. Oh, there's some wonderful set piece scenes and passages that are breathtaking in both beauty and mystery. But as Miranda shuttles back and forth between the real (?) world and the hidden one, I found it increasingly difficult to follow the story itself - which is a real problem when you have so much double-dealing intriguing going on. One good thing, the neglected Andromeda shows up. I found myself enjoying the exchanges between her and Andromeda, which supplied me with a small anchor in the novel's murky stew. Looking back on this series, I wish Park had incorporated 50 or so pages of this effort into book 3 ("The White Tyger"), and called it a magnificent day. And for anyone picking up this novel, without having read the previous books in the series, good luck, because you're going to need a detailed roadmap that the novel, by itself, doesn't provide.
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  • Reviewed in the United States on November 30, 2008
    These books turned out to be really great. They are very unique and teeter the lines between genres (a bit of historical fantasy meets sci-fi meet teen coming of age novel, perhaps?). All four of the novels are well written and really take a second reading to fully comprehend all of the situations and how they fit together.

    I gave it four stars because Park's writing can be a bit convoluted at times and there are certain all-to-convenient situations. He also doesn't explain some things that seemed to be important when they were first mentioned. These aren't big issues that take away from the overall story, just enough to take it down a notch from 5 stars. It's actually not even a 4 out of 5; it's probably 4.6 out of 5 :)
  • Reviewed in the United States on July 10, 2008
    This one is the ending, the one that makes the whole thing be a whole thing. Arguably, the beginnings and middles of narratives do their bits in this regard too. But it's the ending that seals the deal.

    More often than not, complete stories are recognizable versions of some general *kind* of story: a mystery, an epic, a romance. A coming-of-age alternate-world fantasy. Etc. And depending on the kind, certain things can and do happen, in the end, and certain things don't.

    The thing that matters most about this last book in Paul Park's quartet, it seems to me, is that he's trying to break the rules for how certain types of stories (viz., the kind that his would be, if he followed the rules) have to go, ultimately, given the sort of story that they are.

    So it can't turn out that Peter and Miranda, having first developed themselves into interesting, complex, autonomous people, as Rilke and everyone who's anyone says lovers must, then live happily after. And it can't be like the Wizard of Oz, and they all go home. Or like any of one of those stories where the rightful ruler is restored and then all is well forever. It's bad enough that it has to be a story at all, and therefore be determinate in the ways that stories invariably are. In real life, as Park himself likes to say, things just sort of keep on happening.

    It might be that the characters end up becoming who they potentially were, thereby fulfilling their destinies in some way. I'm not sure. But I think that the way to read this 4th book is with considerations of form in mind. Plus it's fantastically well-imagined, no pun intended.
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  • Reviewed in the United States on May 31, 2016
    It took me a long time to read this series.
    Princess of Roumania was interesting.
    Tamorline was excellent.
    The white Tiger was great.
    The hidden world was sketchy.
    Paul Park considers this a plot-driven story.
    I think he's a brilliant seat-of-the-pants writer
    Whose muse led him into such a far country there was no way to tie it back to his original premise. The story just petered out and died, character by character. Which is ultimately true to life, in the long run. But to me unsatisfying. Similar to John Crowley's Aegypt- a brilliant achievement that was nonetheless disappointing in the end, leaving this readers regret for what might have been.
  • Reviewed in the United States on July 24, 2019
    This is book four, drawn out, disappointed in the ending. Just came to an end. Not much more to say. No magic, just fantasy.

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