Preview

Summary of City of Bones

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
841 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Summary of City of Bones
One night at a club, 15-year-old Clarissa "Clary" Fray witnesses an apparent murder by a strange teenager whom no one else can see, Jace Wayland. He tells her the victim was actually a disguised demon. The next day, after Clary sees Jace again, she returns home to find her mother Jocelyn Fray, missing and her apartment trashed and occupied by a monstrous creature. Clary defeats it but is injured.
Jace finds her and takes her to his home, "The Institute," an old Gothic cathedral that normal humans, called "mundanes" or "mundies" by the inhabitants, can't see, because it is concealed by a magic called 'glamour'. After recuperating, Clary meets Jace's tutor, Hodge Starkweather, and his adoptive siblings Isabelle Lightwood and Alec Lightwood. They are Shadowhunters, who hunt demons unseen by humans- except clary. With the help of "Silent Brother" Jeremiah, a monk with magical powers, their investigation into why Clary can see them uncovers a block on her mind, keeping her memories sealed. She travels with Jace and Jeremiah to the City of Bones, where the Silent Brothers attempt to break it. Although the attempt fails, Clary gets flashes of information, particularly the name Magnus Bane, Tracing this name to a party, Clary and the Shadowhunter teens, along with her mundane best friend Simon, discover that Magnus is the High Warlock of Brooklyn, and he placed the block on Clary at the request of her mother, an ex-Shadowhunter. Every two years, Jocelyn had been sending Clary to Magnus to have her memories and Sight (ability to see what mundanes cannot) blocked, hoping to keep her safely in the dark about her true self so she could live a normal life. Magnus refuses to bring Clary's memories back, claiming it would be too difficult and dangerous, and they may return anyway, now that she knows the truth and the spell has begun to fade. During the party, Simon ignores Isabelle's warnings and consumes a drink, which was spiked, offered to him by a faerie, who was a vampire.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Case Study: Sea Pines

    • 67 Words
    • 1 Page

    Callie, a shy 15-year-old girl, is admitted to Sea Pines (“a residential treatment facility”) after a school nurse discovers that she's been self-mutilating. At Sea Pines she meets six other girls who are dealing with austere problems of their own, which range from anorexia to substance abuse. Callie refuses to speak to anyone, but after a while, she realizes that she wants help and starts to talk...…

    • 67 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Arielle Donovan is a fifteen year old girl who has just lost something very important to her, her best friend. On a dark summer night, Jenna leaves Arielle’s home without her insisting she’ll be right back, but never returns. Arielle suffers through a summer alone, desperate to find out what happened to her friend, but lacking the energy that the experience of loss has drained from her. On the afternoon of her fifteenth birthday however, Arielle has a dream. She sights Jenna outside her kitchen window, runs outside only to bolt after her as Jenna sprints away. Losing control of her body and breath, Arielle’s world becomes hazy as she sees her friend run into the burning structure of the old Dexter orphanage, and she is powerless to do anything after being confined behind the Iron Gate that protects the place.…

    • 518 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The Bonesetter's Daughter by Amy Tan begins with LuLing when she is every young talking to Precious Auntie. She’s explaining the morning when Auntie showed her a paper with an extremely important name. LuLing can remember almost everything that happened that morning, except the name on the paper Auntie showed her. The story then moves on to talk about Ruth Young, who we later find out is LuLing’s daughter. It tells the reader about how for the past 8 years starting on August 12th she loses her voice. The novel talks about her boyfriend Art and his two daughters Sophia and Dory. Also about a story her mother gave to her written in Chinese that she has yet to decipher.…

    • 3962 Words
    • 16 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Then he discovers a nameless girl freed from an outlaws’ camp, a captive abused so badly that she is virtually without speech. Julian senses a kindred soul and feels compelled to help her. He calls her Marian and takes her into his household.…

    • 314 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Bonesetter’s Daughter is a novel about three generations of Chinese women. The novel starts off with a short prologue told in the perspective of LuLing Liu Young. LuLing is the daughter of “Precious Auntie”, a horribly disfigured nursemaid who is later revealed to be her mother, and the mother of Ruth, a “ghost-writer” who authors self-help books. Ruth lives with her boyfriend Art and his two teenage daughters, Dory and Fia in an apartment in San Francisco. She mysteriously loses her voice for several days per year around August 12. Ruth is nearly driven to the brink of exhaustion from trying to cope with everything life is throwing at her- her job, her boyfriend, her mother, as well as her past. The novel is divided into 3 parts; Part…

    • 2040 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    To me, the text had one BIG theme: evil as the result of good. The World's Fair was an amazing event for our country. It represented how capable we were and how amazing our technology could become. It negated many of the stereotypes surrounding Chicago that it was only a city of animal butchery. It set a standard for how cities should be run and it picked up the economy with all of the work and tourism it created. But, hidden within all of this good was evil. Although pick pockets and thieves were very common, largely represented in the book is murder. Holmes takes advantage of this situation and lures in young women who are traveling alone. Without the magnificent fair, he would have had a much more difficult time doing what he did. The good that people were creating within the fair created this room for evil. Honestly, it seems this is a real world theme as well. Wherever good is done, corruption is always a possibility and often this opportunity is taken. The sad theme that permeates this book is that where there is good, there will be evil. And although unfortunate, it is reality.To me, the text had one BIG theme: evil as the result of good. The World's Fair was an amazing event for our country. It represented how capable we were and how amazing our technology could become. It negated many of the stereotypes surrounding Chicago that it was only a city of animal butchery. It set a standard for how cities should be run and it picked up the economy with all of the work and tourism it created. But, hidden within all of this good was evil. Although pick pockets and thieves were very common, largely represented in the book is murder. Holmes takes advantage of this situation and lures in young women who are traveling alone. Without the magnificent fair, he would have had a much more difficult time doing what he did. The good that people were creating within the fair created this room for evil. Honestly, it seems this is a real world theme as well. Wherever good is…

    • 396 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Frontier Cities Summary

    • 751 Words
    • 4 Pages

    In the book Frontier Cities, Encounters at the Crossroads of Empire, the authors debate the myriad ways in which cities, in the United States, and worldwide, functioned as crossroads of Empires. This book utilizes other sources, such as Richard C. Wade’s The Urban Frontier: The Rise of Western Cities, 1790–1830 (Urbana, 1959), to posit that cities were central to the formation of frontiers. The book also theorizes that frontier cities were the beginning of civilization, in an area, and not merely the end result.…

    • 751 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Felice Arena and Garry Lyon. Simon (Specky) Magee injures himself and can't play football for his school. he disobeys his parents and is grounded. He meets new people and faces the pressures that all teenagers face. I feel that this is a perfect book for all teenagers because can relate to at least one of the characters.…

    • 584 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Michele Amitrano is a 9 year old boy who is adventurous and has a conscience which is not very familiar for a boy his age. He has also embarked across a boy in a hole named Filippo, in his efforts of freeing Filippo he comes across imagining a lot of fear with monsters like ogres, witches and bogeymen. Michele shows he is very naïve when he attempts to free Filippo after he had swore on his fathers head he wouldn't go back to see Filippo again.…

    • 557 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Author Gary Krist attitude and/or tone towards Mayor Thompson is portrayed quite frequently throughout the book City Of Scoundrels. Showing his response to how the Mayor handles each situation in each disaster or political event going on. From handling the race riots Krist portrays how involved Mayor Thompson tries to be with the situation alone. Lone his vast support base from the African Americans and his support he gives them, he stays distant when decisions have to be made. Though uses his respect for the African American community to find his way to ‘victor’. Thompson uses his ‘somewhat’ wise tactics to keep his public figure on the good side. Krist voices his opinion on how remote the Mayor keeps upon the choices he has to make, while…

    • 603 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Although she fights with her mother and older sister quite often, she still depends heavily on the adults in her life to care for her and enable her social life, a.k.a. her fantasy. For example, her best friend’s father that takes the girls into town and then picks them up. These conflicts that Connie has with her family are what fuel her efforts to make herself sexually attractive and causes her to try picking up boys at the local diner to experiment with sex. In doing so, Connie has an escape from her boring childlike reality, into an exciting fantasy that she gets…

    • 975 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    After moving in with Pegg and her family, Edward becomes the source of the latest gossip in the community; everyone is interested in meeting the mysterious guest Pegg has brought into her home. A barbecue is held in Peggs backyard attempting to welcome him to their neighborhood. Oos and ahhs arise as everyone catches a glimpse of the magical pair of scissorhands he possesses, but show no sign of rejection towards the innocent lad.…

    • 2075 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Lovely Bones Analysis

    • 799 Words
    • 4 Pages

    My eyes move from page to page scrutinizing each word like Susie Salmon watching her family live life. I have finished The Lovely Bones By Alice Sebold. As the time keeps moving forward, the search of Susie Salmon’s murder continues. The police have found evidence that Mr. Harvey is the murder and now trying to find him. As the police continue that search, Susie is walker watching her family move on from her death until; she has reached her moment to go to her heaven. Many events in the story made me connect and evaluate. The Sister Hood of The Traveling By Ann Brashares is about a group of friends that all fit into a magic pair of jeans and they all agree to share the pants over the summer as they all go on their summer vacation trips. The…

    • 799 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Maddy maintains a strong bond with her mother until a life changing lie forces them apart at the end. Even then, their bond is strong enough for Maddy to forgive her mother. Maddy’s relationship with her nurse, Carla, is also influenced because of her so called illness that keeps her indoors. When Maddy leaves her house,…

    • 1097 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Later, the boy’s family gets a new nanny. Ursula Monkton is adored by the boy’s sister, but he can tell that there is something unnatural about her. He and the Hempstocks soon conclude that she is a monster from another world. As keen as the narrator is to accept this, his parents are not. In the novel, the boy makes futile attempts to explain who, or what, Ursula Monkton really is to both his mother and his father, providing another example of how adults would never be able to believe such a phenomenal concept, no matter how much proof they are given. When the boy tries to explain, not only does he sound completely crazy, but he also challenges the stable, simple world his parents believe they live in. Looking at Ursula Monkton, it’s hard for them to believe she could be bad, let alone an evil supernatural monster. Throughout the story, Gaiman makes a stark contrast between the various versions of reality between a child and his parents. This results in a theme that teaches and challenges us to be more like children, to open our minds to new perspectives and look at the world in a different…

    • 506 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics