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S'està carregant… Brian and Wendy Froud's The Pressed Fairy Journal of Madeline Cottingtonde Wendy Froud
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Apunta't a LibraryThing per saber si aquest llibre et pot agradar. No hi ha cap discussió a Converses sobre aquesta obra. It's always a joy to delve back into the squashed-faerie world of the Cottington family created by fantasy-artist extraordinare Brian Froud, and this latest addition to their journals is no exception. Madeline Cottington is the most modern member of the family that we have been privy to meeting, and her take on the faeries that plague the family is decidedly modern in its interpretation. When she first arrives in England when her father's job is relocated from America, she notices that her "eye problems" (read: faeries appearing in her periphery vision) has gotten worse, and she develops an insatiable curiorsity about her father's long-lost British ancestors. Having spoken to her parents (and from the sound of it some professionals as well) about her visions, Madeline is convinced that she is quietly going a bit mad or that there is something medically wrong with her eyes. Yet when she stumbles on a pair of books about her Cottington ancestors (the previous volumes of their published journals that we've all read before) in a bookshop in Camden Market (YES! London's magic coming alive!) she feels an urge to venture to their old family homestead in the English countryside to see if her journey won't give her some answers. From the outset Madeline is helped along the way by some mysterious characters, and on her arrival at the Cottington home she becomes evermore plagued by myserious happenings and the faeries. Discovering additional writings by her ancestors in the Archive Room, Madeline begins to piece together her family history and the strange relationship that they have had over the centuries with the faerie folk - both those that are harmless (the squashed variety) and those that are more dangerous. Madeline's story is one which is absolutely gripping, as we read the discoveries that she chronicles as well as interspersed pages from her ancestors' letters, making this one of the more narrative of the Cottington books. Froud is almost setting us up for additional books (here's hoping) that further explore Madeline and her Cottington relative's adventures, as he leaves the story on a bit of a cliffhanger with Madeline just beginning to figure out some of the clues to her magical past. It goes without saying that the illustrations are wonderful throughout, but the whimsical edited photographs that are also included ground the story with a sense of reality, and further the narrative elements of the book as a whole when paired with Madeline's humourous and youthful words. ( ) Sense ressenyes | afegeix-hi una ressenya
Pertany a aquestes sèriesLady Cottington (5)
Renowned artist/author duo Brian and Wendy Froud present, for the first time, the backstory of Cottington Hall and its intriguing inhabitants: the Cottington family and the faeries living among them. The rise and fall of this eccentric British family gives us humorous, and sometimes tragic, glimpses into how the Cottingtons became inexorably entwined with the faeries during the late 19th and 20th centuries. When a descendant, Maddi, visits the Cottingtons's dilapidated hall, she finds herself caught up in a story of intrigue and mystery. While reading the letters and journals of her ancestors and discovering a wealth of inventions aimed at allowing humans to visit the fairy realm unharmed, Maddi slowly becomes aware of the faeries and their world. Also available from Brian and Wendy Froud: Brian Froud's Faeries' Tales and Brian Froud's Goblins: 10 1/2 Anniversary Edition. No s'han trobat descripcions de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — S'està carregant… GèneresClassificació Decimal de Dewey (DDC)823.92Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction Modern Period 2000-LCC (Clas. Bibl. Congrés EUA)ValoracióMitjana:
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