The Girl from the Attic bookcover

The Girl from the Attic

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Description

To find a place in her family, Maddy must travel through time to get there.

Maddy Rose lives in two worlds. A hundred years apart. In the same strange house built in the shape of an octagon. When a mysterious black cat leads her into an unknown attic, she meets Clare and his very sick sister Eva. Together Maddy and Clare jump into a money-making scheme in his uncle's dangerous soap factory to buy a cure for Eva. But an unexpected tragedy befalls them. And then Maddy is pulled back into her own time to confront the premature birth of her own sister. Will Maddy be able to deal with hardships of two lives? Will the skills she learned in the past help her solve the problems of the present? Can the strange shape of the house make a difference? Reminiscent of Janet Lunn's The Root Cellar, The Girl from the Attic shows the challenges of growing up and finding one's place in the world.

Uncommon elements give this time-travel novel a charming spin. Kirkus Reviews

Product Details

PublisherCommon Deer Press
Publish DateOctober 07, 2020
Pages226
LanguageEnglish
TypeBook iconPaperback / softback
EAN/UPC9781988761510
Dimensions8.4 X 5.4 X 0.6 inches | 0.7 pounds

About the Author

For Marie Prins, her life has been, in one way or another, about books. As a child, she devoured them, at university, she studied them with a BA in English Literature, as an adult, she sold them at The Toronto Women's Bookstore and Parentbooks. Now she teaches children how to read them.

Reviews

Uncommon elements give this time-travel novel a charming spin.

-- "Kirkus Reviews"
A nostalgic time capsule for the first decade of two successive centuries, The Girl from the Attic is a charming lesson in gratitude and what it means to live in the present.-- "Quill & Quire"
Highly RecommendedThe adult themes of death, illness and fear of an "outsider" parent and a new baby will all resonate even with adults and will show child readers the importance and benefit of considering someone else's point of view. The locations are vividly described by the author, and it is easy to be transported to the past with all its charm - and also all its danger. The Girl in the Attic is a compelling, human read with three dimensional characters and enough charm and tension to keep readers entertained.-- "Canadian Review Of Materials"

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