{{Short description|Fantasy novel series by Libba Bray}} {{Infobox book <!-- See Wikipedia:WikiProject_Novels or Wikipedia:WikiProject_Books --> | name = Gemma Doyle Trilogy | title_orig = | translator = | image = | caption = | author = [[Libba Bray]] | cover_artist = | country = [[United States]] | language = [[English language|English]] | series = {{Plainlist| * ''[[A Great and Terrible Beauty]]'' * ''[[Rebel Angels (Bray novel)|Rebel Angels]]'' * ''[[The Sweet Far Thing]]'' }} | genre = [[Fantasy novel]] | publisher = [[Random House]] | release_date = [[2003 in literature|December 9, 2003]] – December 26, 2007 | media_type = Print ([[Hardcover]]) | exclude_cover = yes }}

The '''''Gemma Doyle Trilogy'''''<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.randomhouse.com/teens/gemmadoyle/home.php|title=The Gemma Doyle Trilogy|publisher=Random House |access-date=2008-01-03|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080109201533/http://www.randomhouse.com/teens/gemmadoyle/home.php|archive-date=2008-01-09|url-status=dead}}</ref> is a [[trilogy]] of [[fantasy novel]]s by American writer [[Libba Bray]]. They are told from the perspective of Gemma Doyle, a girl in the late nineteenth century. The ''Gemma Doyle Trilogy'' consists of three books: ''[[A Great and Terrible Beauty]]'' (published December 9, 2003), ''[[Rebel Angels (Bray novel)|Rebel Angels]]'' (published 2006), and ''[[The Sweet Far Thing]]'' (published December 26, 2007).

==Plot== This series is a cross between period fiction and Fantasy. The story revolves around Gemma Doyle, a young woman sent from her home in British [[India]] to the boarding school, Spence Academy, after the mysterious death of her mother. There she meets Ann, Felicity, and Pippa, three other remarkable young women. Together, they discover the dark past of their school, which closely revolves around a mystical group referred to as The Order. In the first book, they find out that this group of sorceresses was forced to disband after one of their own, a woman named Sarah Rees-Toome, betrayed them. Throughout the series Gemma learns of her own heritage and the magical powers she possesses, including the ability to enter "The Realms," a magical world in which dreams can become reality, but everything seems to have a cost. This series addresses some of the issues faced by women in the late 1800s, and creates parallels to issues faced by women today. There are many female characters, and the struggles they encounter on their journey to becoming empowered both within and outside of The Realms ring true. Other themes include dissecting dualities (in particular, the duality between good and evil;) free will versus fate; going against social norms; power; and, most of all, the concept of choice.

The three books in the trilogy span just one year, with ''A Great and Terrible Beauty'' beginning in June 1895 and ''The Sweet Far Thing'' ending in June 1896.

==Characters== {{main|List of Gemma Doyle Trilogy characters}} Gemma Doyle, Felicity, Ann, Pippa, Mary Dowd, Kartik, Sarah Rees-Toome (Circe)

==References to other literature== ''A Great and Terrible Beauty'' refers to many literary classics. Among those mentioned are: *[[Persephone]]: [[Pippa Cross (Gemma Doyle Trilogy)|Pippa]] is sometimes seen as being like the tragic, beautiful [[Greek mythology|Greek]] Queen of the Underworld, who ate [[pomegranate]] seeds to stay in the Underworld, just as Pippa ate berries in the Realm <ref>[https://archive.today/20120707123738/http://community.livejournal.com/libbabray/8491.html Libba Bray's explanation of Pippa as Persephone]</ref> *[[The Lady of Shalott]] by [[Alfred Tennyson, 1st Baron Tennyson|Tennyson]]: Miss Hester Asa Moore leads her art class in a discussion of the [[Elaine of Astolat|Elaine]], ''The Lady of Shalott'', and art based upon Tennyson's poem, in Chapter Nine. This poem has special significance for [[List of Gemma Doyle Trilogy characters#Ann Bradshaw|Ann]] and [[Pippa Cross (Gemma Doyle Trilogy)|Pippa]], who both see themselves as being trapped, as the lady was. Miss Moore states that the lady dies "because she lets herself float through [the] world." Stanzas five, six, eight, and fifteen of ''The Lady of Shalott'' are also quoted, as a form of introduction, before Chapter One. *''The Perils of Lucy, A Girl's Own Story'': A fictional [[three-volume novel]] that Ann loves. Gemma thinks that stories like it (a popular staple of [[Victorian literature]]) about a "poor, timid girl" who is greatly put upon by her wicked peers, before eventually [[Rags to riches|being found to be of noble birth]], are "poppycock". As with ''The Lady of Shalott'', the implication is that women, even in a male-dominated society, can only expect to be happy if they do something to make themselves happy, instead of sitting passively by. *''[[Odyssey|The Odyssey]]'': Kartik reads this in ''Rebel Angels''. Gemma's adventures in ''Rebel Angels'' parallels some of [[Odysseus]].

==Film== {{main|A Great and Terrible Beauty#Film|l1=A Great and Terrible Beauty}}

In July 2006, [[Sony Pictures]] and [[Icon Productions]], the film production company run by [[Mel Gibson]], announced that it would adapt the book into a film based on ''A Great and Terrible Beauty'', to be written and directed by [[Charles Sturridge]]. People have been rumored to be playing the characters, but author [[Libba Bray]] has confirmed that no one has been cast. Author Libba Bray discusses the current status of the film on her webpage. In 2009, Bray announced that Icon relinquished the rights of the film, and so the film version of the book will not be made.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0833962/|title=A Great and Terrible Beauty|publisher=|via=www.imdb.com}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://libbabray.wordpress.com/2009/07/23/r-i-p-movie-version/|title=R.I.P. movie version|date=23 July 2009|publisher=}}</ref>

==References== {{reflist}}

==External links== * [https://www.getunderlined.com/books/258989/the-gemma-doyle-trilogy-by-libba-bray/ ''Gemma Doyle Trilogy'' official web site] * {{isfdb series|id=19797|title=Gemma Doyle}}

{{Libba Bray}} {{Authority control}}

[[Category:Gemma Doyle Trilogy| ]] [[Category:American fantasy novels]] [[Category:American young adult novels]] [[Category:Fantasy novel trilogies]] [[Category:Feminist fantasy novels]] [[Category:Young adult fantasy novels]] [[Category:Novels set in the 19th century]] [[Category:Novels by Libba Bray]] [[Category:Young adult novel series]]