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Granny Shaftoe tried to warn them. A witch she may have been, but she spoke the truth. Meric, proud and fearless, had no time for soothsayers, ignored her wisdom, and was never seen again. Robin missed his friend and spoke of him often to his son, Alan. Soon he too went into the forest to fish from the well... Ages 11+.
In his masterly survey, Written for Children, John Rowe Townsend describes A Game of Dark as ‘ambitious and harrowing’. His outline can’t be bettered. ‘Donald Jackson, nearly fifteen, suffers the pain and guilt of not loving his dying, Methodist lay-preacher father; ha adopted as father-figure the Church of England clergyman who is indirectly responsible for his sister’s death and his father’s maiming; and, under unbearable pressure, retreats into a medieval chivalric world in which he has to kill the huge, preying Worm. This he achieves at length by unfair play, stabbing its under-belly from the protection of a hole in the ground; there is no honour in it; yet at last he can love his father, who now dies, and can accept reality.’ An admirer of this book is the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams. He has described it as ‘very dark’ but ‘an extraordinary novel’
An old legend provides the clues for this delightful treasure hunt in the Yorkshire dales. The seekers are Nan and Mary from the farm, Peter from the inn, and Adam Forrest, the head boy from Nan’s school. The first clue is concealed in the old sideboard at the inn and the last somewhere inside a hill; but the one that seems most important is a unicorn. Adam is too old to bother with unicorns and thinks he can uncover the mystery using science. Mary is too young to be concerned with science and calls on the fairies for help, and prepares a grass rope so that she can catch the unicorn properly. Whether the treasure is at last discovered by science or by magic is told in this absorbing book by William Mayne.First published in 1957, A Grass Rope was awarded the Carnegie Medal for that year.
Bringing great writing back into print - a Faber Finds book.
Opening with a macabre mid-nineteenth century murder, The Mayne Inheritance unfolds like a gothic thriller. Was it the murder victim's money that founded patriarch Patrick Mayne's Queen Street business empire? And were the whispered accusations of murder and genetic madness true? For 150 years scandal and mystery have surrounded the Maynes, a wealthy family who donated the magnificent site on which the University of Queensland now stands.
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Judith and Mick live at the farm at New Scar House, and Bob and Dick live at the farm at Ravensgill. The children go to the same school, but know nothing of their familial relationship to one another, broken off 40 years before. However, the arrival of a letter awakens the children's curiosity.
A Year and a Day is the whimsical and at times heart-wrenching tale of Adam, a fairy child abandoned in the human world, and of the family who adopts him for a year and a day. First published in 1976, this classic story by William Mayne, one of the most esteemed writers of the twentieth century, appears here in a new Candlewick Treasures edition with delightful art by John Lawrence, the acclaimed illustrator of Watership Down and The Mysteries of Zigomar.
The garden of the world - a fantasy land where beauty and peace envelop the kingdom. The evil Mouly threatens to destroy the great garden and the king's daughter sets out to defeat the Mouldy.