False Prince
by Jennifer Nielson

THE FALSE PRINCE is the
thrilling first book in a brand-new trilogy filled with danger and
deceit and hidden identities that will have readers rushing breathlessly
to the end.
In a discontent kingdom, civil war is brewing. To
unify the divided people, Conner, a nobleman of the court, devises a
cunning plan to find an impersonator of the king's long-lost son and
install him as a puppet prince. Four orphans are recruited to compete
for the role, including a defiant boy named Sage. Sage knows that
Conner's motives are more than questionable, yet his life balances on a
sword's point -- he must be chosen to play the prince or he will
certainly be killed. But Sage's rivals have their own agendas as well.
As
Sage moves from a rundown orphanage to Conner's sumptuous palace, layer
upon layer of treachery and deceit unfold, until finally, a truth is
revealed that, in the end, may very well prove more dangerous than all
of the lies taken together.
An extraordinary adventure filled
with danger and action, lies and deadly truths that will have readers
clinging to the edge of their seats.
A Guest Post by Jennifer Nielson
Fight the Good Fight
When I sign copies of THE FALSE PRINCE for fans,
my signature line usually says, “Fight the good fight.” A few months ago, I
signed a book that way for a fifth grader and then asked her, “Do you know what
that means?”
She eyed the boy next to her in line. “You want us
to fight?”
The boy looked nervous. I think he swallowed his
gum.
“Ack! No! I want you to read, not bleed!” (Okay, I
didn’t actually say that, but I thought it.)
She had missed the meaning of the phrase entirely.
So this is how I explained it to her. And also to the boy next in line, since
he still seemed worried about getting jabbed.
There are things in life worth caring about. Good
things worth defending, and yes, worth fighting for. Not a fight with fists –
there’s already too much of that in the world – but instead, a fight with
ideas, with passion, and with your heart and soul. And if that thing is important enough, then it
becomes a good fight.
Maybe for you, that thing is the idea that you can succeed in life, even if others
think you won’t. Maybe it’s a fight against unfairness, against cheating, or
the fight to protect others who can’t defend themselves. Maybe it’s something
you want to change in the world. Yes, even if it’s just changing your own small
corner of the world.
The good fight means you have a reason to say,
“For this idea, I will not back down, or give in, or give up. For this idea, I
will never stop fighting to win.”
In THE FALSE PRINCE, Sage is fighting the good
fight. To defend a servant girl. To protect the country from treason. And to
survive a twisted contest where he must either impersonate the missing prince,
or be killed.
Your good fight may not be on that level of danger
(In fact, I hope it’s not!), but you can still put everything you have into
succeeding. Stay strong. Stay caring. Fight the good fight.
About the Author
For as far back as Jennifer can remember, she has shared her brain
with imaginary characters. She figures it’s okay if she talks to them as
she’s working on her stories, as long as they don’t start talking back.
Jennifer began writing in elementary school. Her first attempt at a
full-length story was in 6th grade when she wrote about a girl who
becomes trapped in her daydreams and that world becomes real. Not a bad
idea, you say? Wrong. It was pretty awful, but Jennifer liked it at the
time. She even called a locksmith to do research on how to pick locks.
When he found out she was only 11, he ended the call and the story got
set aside, unfinished.
But she began other stories, writing in spiral notebooks or plucking
out keys on an electric typewriter (yep, she’s that old). Stories of a
boy who tries to sell his annoying sister, of a celebrity who gets stuck
in a small town (think Disney’s Cars, only with humans), and several
other stories that all eventually wound up in a box in the back of her
closet. She also drew cartoons and made up poems about the people in
them. Jennifer has taken steps to ensure the cartoons never see the
light of day again.
Jennifer has always loved reading and for most of her childhood, kept
a tall stack of books at the side of her bed. She loved the Hardy Boys
and Encyclopedia Brown series’, but her favorite childhood book was The
Wolves of Willoughby Chase by Joan Aiken. Her favorite book in junior
high was The Outsiders. That book’s author, S.E. Hinton, published The
Outsiders at the age of 17. Jennifer set a goal to be published sooner.
Jennifer didn’t make her goal, not even close. She got heavily
involved in local theater and in school speech and debate competitions.
The theater entertained the characters in her head, and the speech and
debate filled her desire to never stop talking.
Jennifer completed her first book in her early 20’s. She told a
neighbor she planned to be published one day. The neighbor smiled back
like Jennifer had a greater chance of landing on the moon one day. That
was understandable. The first book was pretty bad.
So was her second. And third. The fourth wasn’t terrible, but by then
Jennifer had decided she was writing in the wrong genre. The characters
in her head had changed from adult romantic suspense to young adult and
children’s fantasy characters. Jennifer had to change her writing too.
Jennifer’s debut book was ELLIOT AND THE GOBLIN WAR (Sourcebooks, Oct
2010). That series became known as The Underworld Chronicles. The next
series she released was The Ascendance trilogy, beginning with THE FALSE
PRINCE (Scholastic, Apr 2012). She will also write the sixth book of
the Infinity Ring. (bio info retrieved f rom author's
website)