Title: The Children of Green Knowe
Author: L.M. Boston
Illustrator: Peter Boston
Publication: Harcourt, paperback, originally published in 1954
Genre: Children’s fantasy
Setting: 20th century CambridgeshireDescription: As the story begins, Toseland is on a train (alone at 7 years old; times have certainly changed) going to visit his great-grandmother after the autumn term at school. It is December and there is flooding at the station: he is picked up by taxi but then taken by boat by the family retainer, Boggis, to a manor house that is lit up against the darkness.
Showing posts with label timeslip. Show all posts
Showing posts with label timeslip. Show all posts
Tuesday, April 19, 2022
Monday, March 23, 2020
Victory by Susan Cooper, a timeslip story about a ship's boy at Trafalgar with Admiral Nelson
Title: Victory
Author: Susan Cooper
Author: Susan Cooper
Publication: Margaret K. McElderry Books, hardcover, 2006
Genre: Middle Grade Historical Fantasy
Plot: This is the story of two children, separated by two hundred years, and how each crosses the ocean to cope with a new life thrust upon them.
Saturday, September 16, 2017
The Spider's Web
When I was about eleven, my mother and I came across a radio broadcast of what seemed to be a children's book, appealing but completely unknown to us. We were fascinated. For some reason, the show's signal was very weak, and it would disappear periodically - particularly at the point where the narrator might have told us the title or author! There was a boy and a garden and time travel, all of which we invariably enjoyed. In those pre-Internet days, there was no way of finding out what the book actually was. I think we might even have called the local PBS station without success but what I especially remember is being in our kitchen in Newton at dinner time and straining to hear what was coming from the radio. The show was The Spider's Web and the book was eventually revealed to be Tom's Midnight Garden (1958), a delightful fantasy about a lonely boy, recuperating with relatives, who finds a mysterious playmate in their garden at night. Author Philippa Pearce wrote several other books, which I own, but this was her masterpiece. It won the Carnegie Medal which is the award for Britain's best children's book.
Once we finally caught the title, we raced for the library and the copy we found had this very cover. We didn't always remember but it became a game with us to turn on the radio and see how long it would take for us to identify the book. Usually, we did know them: I seem to recall Joan Aiken and Lloyd Alexander (and turning it off when it was The Wind in the Willows, one of the few English classics we disliked), among others. Frances Shrand was the narrator and there was a catchy tune at the end, which some helpful person has posted:
There's a web like a spider's web
Made of silver light and shadows
Spun by the moon in my room at night
It's a web made to catch a dream
Hold it tight 'til I awaken
As if to tell me my dream is all right
Does anyone else remember this show from the 70s?
Once we finally caught the title, we raced for the library and the copy we found had this very cover. We didn't always remember but it became a game with us to turn on the radio and see how long it would take for us to identify the book. Usually, we did know them: I seem to recall Joan Aiken and Lloyd Alexander (and turning it off when it was The Wind in the Willows, one of the few English classics we disliked), among others. Frances Shrand was the narrator and there was a catchy tune at the end, which some helpful person has posted:
There's a web like a spider's web
Made of silver light and shadows
Spun by the moon in my room at night
It's a web made to catch a dream
Hold it tight 'til I awaken
As if to tell me my dream is all right
Does anyone else remember this show from the 70s?
Monday, November 12, 2012
Winter Shadows (Book Review)
Title: Winter Shadows
Author: Margaret Buffie
Publication Information: Tundra Press Hardcover, 2010
Genre: Children’s Fiction / Timeslip
Plot: Two young women in Western Canada, one in 1856 and one
in the present, separated by five generations, communicate through an old diary
and a cherished brooch. Beatrice, a
lovely and, unusually, educated young woman in a rural Canadian town, has
returned from school to find that her father has married a dreadful woman, Ivy,
who not only resents her stepdaughter but is prejudiced against her husband’s
Cree ancestry (this would make more sense if it were the ancestry of the first
wife – Ivy shows her distaste of her mother-in-law’s and stepdaughter’s
heritage but apparently overcame her feelings with regard to her husband; I
suppose because she was desperate to remarry).
Ivy’s seemingly uncouth adult son has settled nearby but Beatrice
prefers the company of the new and more refined minister, Reverend
Dalhousie.
Monday, October 29, 2012
When Marnie Was There by Joan Robinson (Book Review)
Title: When Marnie Was There
Author: Joan G. Robinson Illustrated: Peggy Fortnum
Publication Information: Armada paperback, original pub date 1967
Genre: Children’s Fiction / Time Slip Plot: Lonely Anna, an inarticulate orphan who lives with a kindly older couple who do not understand her, goes to stay in Norfolk with their friends after being ill with asthma. Exploring the area, she is entranced by the Marsh House on a creek nearby and by Marnie, an outgoing girl her age who appears and disappears mysteriously from the house. When Marnie is there, she is the perfect friend – she is imaginative and comes up with great games – but the reader guesses she is not real and the locals think Anna is talking to herself. As in Tom’s Midnight Garden, the loneliness of two children in the same place but many years apart results in a friendship that transcends time. Although her friendship with Marnie is not without sadness (which she does not understand), it helps prickly Anna learn how to be a friend and how to accept affection. The outgoing Lindsay family that moves into the old house on the creek after Marnie disappears for good completes the process, showing Anna what it is like to be part of a large and lively family and helping her come to terms with her foster parents and the birth family she feels abandoned her.
Author: Joan G. Robinson Illustrated: Peggy Fortnum
Publication Information: Armada paperback, original pub date 1967
Genre: Children’s Fiction / Time Slip Plot: Lonely Anna, an inarticulate orphan who lives with a kindly older couple who do not understand her, goes to stay in Norfolk with their friends after being ill with asthma. Exploring the area, she is entranced by the Marsh House on a creek nearby and by Marnie, an outgoing girl her age who appears and disappears mysteriously from the house. When Marnie is there, she is the perfect friend – she is imaginative and comes up with great games – but the reader guesses she is not real and the locals think Anna is talking to herself. As in Tom’s Midnight Garden, the loneliness of two children in the same place but many years apart results in a friendship that transcends time. Although her friendship with Marnie is not without sadness (which she does not understand), it helps prickly Anna learn how to be a friend and how to accept affection. The outgoing Lindsay family that moves into the old house on the creek after Marnie disappears for good completes the process, showing Anna what it is like to be part of a large and lively family and helping her come to terms with her foster parents and the birth family she feels abandoned her.
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