Another dazzling exploration of fictionality in the Worldquake series, where juvenile characters can fall unexpectedly into other fantasy texts . . . Clever jokes and philosophical conundrums abound
* Financial Times *
<b>PRAISE FOR THE WORLDQUAKE SEQUENCE: </b>The most exciting debut in children's fiction since HARRY POTTER
- JOANNE HARRIS,
This tale of magical education is a cracker . . . has its own distinctive style
* Guardian *
Otherworldly . . . 'Getting lost in a book' takes on new meaning
* Mail on Sunday *
A quest to create a magical book is at the centre of this thought-provoking fantasy novel . . . Wonderfully bibliophilic
* Financial Times *
Will whisk you off on a spectacular adventure
* The Week *
An entrancing novel that stands on its prose . . . set in a dystopian future after a massive quake has annihilated modern technology . . . She is far too inventive a writer ever to let us feel we've been here before
* Daily Telegraph *
Lively, inventive, phrase-making fantasy . . . revels in evocative spells, names and descriptions of quaint shops, fabulous food and delicious interiors . . . has something of J.K. Rowling's capacity to delight
* Sunday Times *
Superb fantasy *****
* Sunday Telegraph *
In this children's debut from adult fantasy writer Thomas, a young girl inherits a magical library and discovers you can - quite literally - become lost in a book . . . The first book in the Worldquake Sequence augurs well for what is to follow
* Sunday Post *
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Described by Philip Pullman as 'ingenious and original', Scarlett Thomas has always loved stories, magic and mysterious places. She tried (and failed) to write her first novel when she was six. Since then she has successfully written lots of novels, but this is her first series for children. She lives near the sea in an old house full of books, and is a professor in the English department of the University of Kent.
Galloglass is the third volume in the Worldquake Sequence.
Worldquake.co.uk