Serial Garden

£3.99

Serial Garden

The Complete Armitage Family Stories

Children’s / Teenage fiction: Classic fiction Children’s / Teenage fiction: Short stories

Author: Joan Aiken

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Collection: Virago Modern Classics

Language: English

Published by: Virago

Published on: 6th August 2015

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 2 Mb

ISBN: 9780349005867


FROM THE AUTHOR OF THE WOLVES OF WILLOUGHBY CHASE

''She''s one of the most important and interesting children''s fiction writers of the last fifty years'' NEIL GAIMAN

''What a thrill to discover this gem from the witty and endlessly inventive Joan Aiken'' CHRIS RIDDELL

''She is one of the writers I admire most in the world'' KATHERINE RUNDELL

''She was a literary treasure, and her books will continue to delight for years to come'' PHILIP PULLMAN

''The most swooningly romantic story you''ll ever read - The Serial Garden'' FRANK COTTRELL-BOYCE

''I wish we''ll have two children called Mark and Harriet. And I hope lots of interesting and unusual things will happen to them. It would be nice if they had a fairy godmother, for instance. And a phoenix or something out of the ordinary for a pet. We could have a special day for interesting and unusual things to happen - say, Mondays. But not always Mondays, and not only Mondays, or that would get a bit dull''

As a result of their mother''s honeymoon wish, Mark and Harriet Armitage have a fairy godmother, a pet unicorn and are prepared for anything life can throw at them (especially, but not always, on a Monday): hatching griffins in the airing cupboard, Latin lessons with a ghost, furious Furies on the doorstep and an enchanted garden locked inside a cereal packet. Life with the Armitages can be magical, funny, terrifying - but never, ever dull.

''A delightful summary of one side of Aiken''s talent: whimsical, funny, a series of brilliantly imaginative ideas stitched together with dream logic . . . It is the mixture of irrepressible gaiety and invention with the tragic that makes Aiken one of the great children''s authors . . . impossible to calculate the number of people who have enjoyed her books - who have had some magic injected into the mundane'' SUNDAY TELEGRAPH

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