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A tense, evocative, portrait of love and deceit set during one long
hot summer in France, The Greengage Summer is a hauntingly
beautiful coming-of-age story by from Rumer Godden, the author of
Black Narcissus, now a major BBC drama series. When their mother is
suddenly taken ill on holiday, five siblings are left to fend for
themselves at the elegant, faded hotel, Les Oeillets. Under the
increasingly jealous gaze of the glamorous patronne, Mademoiselle
Zizi, the children gravitate towards her mysterious and charming
lover, Eliot, for comfort. And, amongst the gnarled trees of the
old orchards, thirteen-year-old Cecil watches from the sidelines as
her achingly beautiful sister, Joss, is drawn into the heart of a
toxic affair. Designed to appeal to the booklover, the Macmillan
Collector's Library is a series of beautiful gift editions of much
loved classic titles. Macmillan Collector's Library are books to
love and treasure.
A beautifully illustrated cover edition of Rumer Godden's classic
story about friendship and family, Miss Happiness and Miss Flower.
When little Nona is sent from her sunny home in India to live with
her relatives in chilly England, she is miserable. Then a box
arrives for her in the post and inside, wrapped up in tissue paper,
are two little Japanese dolls. A slip of paper says their names are
Miss Happiness and Miss Flower. Nona thinks that they must feel
lonely too, so far away from home. Then Nona has an idea - she will
build her dolls the perfect house! It will be just like a Japanese
home in every way. It will even have a tiny Japanese garden. And as
she begins to make Miss Happiness and Miss Flower happy, Nona finds
that she is happier too.
Tottie is a loving little wooden doll who lives with her family in
a shoebox. The doll family is owned by two sisters, Emily and
Charlotte, and they are very happy, except for one thing: they long
for a proper home. To their delight, their wish comes true when
Emily and Charlotte fix up a Victorian dolls' house - just for
them. It's perfect. But then a new arrival starts to wreak havoc in
the dolls' house. For Marchpane might be a wonderfully beautiful
doll, but she is also terribly cruel. And she always gets her own
way . . . First published in 1947, Rumer Godden's classic The
Dolls' House has been delighting children for years, and this
beautiful edition, illustrated by Jane Ray, will delight future
generations for years to come.
A tense, evocative, portrait of love and deceit set during one long
hot summer in France, The Greengage Summer is a hauntingly
beautiful coming-of-age story by from Rumer Godden, the author of
Black Narcissus, a major BBC drama series. When their mother is
suddenly taken ill on holiday, five siblings are left to fend for
themselves at the elegant, faded hotel, Les Oeillets. Under the
increasingly jealous gaze of the glamorous patronne, Mademoiselle
Zizi, the children gravitate towards her mysterious and charming
lover, Eliot, for comfort. And, amongst the gnarled trees of the
old orchards, thirteen-year-old Cecil watches from the side lines
as her achingly beautiful sister, Joss, is drawn into the heart of
a toxic affair. 'Rumer Godden's novels pulse with life' - Daily
Telegraph 'One of the finest. . .English novelists' - New York
Times 'An exciting tale, this novel has both charm and atmosphere'
- Evening Standard
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The Little Bookroom (Paperback)
Eleanor Farjeon; Illustrated by Edward Ardizzone; Afterword by Rumer Godden
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R358
R308
Discovery Miles 3 080
Save R50 (14%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Ivy, Holly, and Mr. and Mrs. Jones all have one Christmas wish.
Ivy, an orphan, wishes for a real home and sets out in search of
the grandmother she's sure she can find. Holly, a doll, wishes for
a child to bring her to life. And the Joneses wish more than
anything for a son or daughter to share their holiday. Can all
three wishes come true? This festive tale is perfectly complemented
by beloved Barbara Cooney's luminous illustrations, filled with the
warm glow of the Christmas spirit.
The old woman is happy living in her old vinegar bottle house by a
loch, until one day she saves a charming fish prince who grants her
wishes in return. At first the old woman's wishes are humble -- a
hot dinner and a little cottage -- but as she asks for more and
more extravagant things she forgets how happy she used to be in her
little vinegar bottle house with her cat, Malt. Can her wishes
truly bring her happiness? This traditional tale is adapted with
charm and humour by Rumer Godden, one of the twentieth-century's
best-loved writers, while the beautiful artwork of best-selling
illustrator Mairi Hedderwick, creator of Katie Morag, give the
story a Scottish twist! Featuring beautiful Scottish landscapes and
lively characters, The Old Woman Who Lived in a Vinegar Bottle is a
wonderful traditional tale to share with young children.
At fifteen and twelve, the daughters of diplomat Sir Edward
Gwithiam have already seen more of the world than most girls of
their age. But when Una and her younger sister, Halcyon, are
summoned from their English boarding school to join their father in
New Delhi, they encounter a reality unlike anything they have ever
experienced. For Hal, India is a glorious adventure, filled with
exotic sights and sounds, and a host of interesting new people. But
Una feels like an outsider in this world of ingrained racial
prejudice and cultural elitism left over from the days of the
British Raj. Then Ravi, a young Indian gardener, brings a welcome
light into Una's life, relieving her sadness and loneliness with
poetry and compassion. But what begins as a simple friendship soon
blossoms into a love forbidden by society, threatening to end in
scandal and disaster. The Peacock Spring is a beautiful and
heartbreaking novel of loss of innocence and coming-of-age from the
acclaimed author of Black Narcissus and The Greengage Summer.
From Rumer Godden, one of the foremost authors of the 20th century,
and illustrated by two-time Caldecott Honor recipient Tasha Tudor,
comes a heartwarming tale filled with imagination and creativity
that is ideal for any girl who has ever loved a doll so much that
it has become real to her.
For Tottie Plantaganet, a little wooden doll, belonging to Emily
and Charlotte Dane is wonderful. The only thing missing is a
dollhouse that Tottie and her family could call their very own. But
when the dollhouse finally does arrive, Tottie's problems really
begin. That dreadful doll Marchpane comes to live with them,
disrupting the harmony of the Plantaganet family with her lies and
conceited way. Will Tottie ever be able to call the dollhouse home?
An ALA Notable Book
"For little girls who love dolls, women who remember dollhouse
days, and literary critics who can recognize a masterpiece."--"The
New York Times"
Rumer Godden is the author of numerous books for children and
adults, including "The Story of Holly and Ivy," illustrated by
Barbara Cooney, and the bestseller "The Black Narcissus."
Tasha Tudor has written and illustrated many books for children,
including "1 is One" and" Mother Goose," both Caldecott Honor
books.
From Rumer Godden, the acclaimed author of Black Narcissus returns
again to her beloved India with a novel brimming with heart, wit,
unforgettable characters, and 'a sense of timelessness reminiscent
of E. M. Forster' (The Times). Hotel owner Auntie Sanni has
entertained all manner of guests during her many years as hostess
at Patna Hall, a popular vacation spot on the lush Coromandel
coast. Now, with an election coming, business is especially brisk,
and her hotel is packed with Indian politicians, British diplomats,
journalists, American tourists - even an elephant, and a woman of
mystery or two. Among the vacationers are Mary and Blaise, a young
English couple on their honeymoon. But where Mary is enchanted by
the colours, sounds and vibrant Indian life, prim and priggish
Blaise sees only squalor, sordidness and a Coromandel Sea teeming
with sharks. Matters are only made worse when Mary becomes
interested in local Indian politics - particularly the handsome,
exquisitely spoken candidate Krishnan, whose kindness and wisdom
are like a balm for her spirit . . .
By the author of Black Narcissus and The River 'Rumer Godden's
novels have a timeless shimmer' GUARDIAN 'One hundred years after
her birth, Rumer Godden's novels still pulse with life' MATTHEW
DENNISON, TELEGRAPH 'Her craftsmanship is always sure' NEW YORK
TIMES 'The motto was Pax but the word was set in a circle of
thorns. Peace, but what a strange peace, made of unremitting toil
and effort . . .' Bruised by tragedy, Philippa Talbot leaves behind
a successful career with the civil service for a new calling: to
join an enclosed order of Benedictine nuns. In this small community
of fewer than one hundred women, she soon discovers all the human
frailties: jealousy, love, despair. But each crisis of heart and
conscience is guided by the compassion and intelligence of the
Abbess and by the Sisters' shared bond of faith and ritual. Away
from the world, and yet at one with it, Philippa must learn to
forgive and forget her past . . .
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Black Narcissus (Hardcover)
Rumer Godden; Introduction by Rosie Thomas
1
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R453
R370
Discovery Miles 3 700
Save R83 (18%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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NOW A HAUNTING BBC DRAMA, STARRING GEMMA ARTERTON AND DIANA RIGG 'A
remarkable and beautiful book' DAILY TELEGRAPH 'I envy anyone
reading it for the first time' AMANDA COE '[Godden has] a genius
for storytelling' EVENING STANDARD High in the Himalayas, the
mountaintop palace shines like a jewel. Built for the General's
harem, laughter and music once floated out over the gorge. Now it
sits abandoned, windswept and haunting. The palace is bestowed to
the Sisters of Mary, and what was once known as 'the House of
Women' becomes the Convent of St Faith. Close to the heavens, the
nuns feel inspired, working fervently to establish their school and
hospital. But as the isolation and emptiness of the mountain become
increasingly unsettling, passions long repressed emerge with tragic
consequences . . .
By the author of Black Narcissus and The Diddakoi With a foreword
by JACQUELINE WILSON 'A masterpiece of construction and utterly
realistically convincing...Rumer Godden's writing is admired for
many qualities . . . but I think her greatest strength is her
accurate, unsentimental portrayal of children' Jacqueline Wilson
Someone has been digging up the private garden in the Square. Miss
Angela Chesney of the Garden Committee is sure that a gang of local
boys is to blame, but her sister, Olivia, isn't so sure. She
wonders why the neighbourhood children - 'sparrows', she calls them
- have to be locked out: don't they have a right to enjoy the
garden too? Nobody has any idea what sends Lovejoy Mason and her
few friends in search of 'good garden earth'. Still less do they
imagine where their investigation will lead them - to a struggling
restaurant, a bombed-out church, and, at the heart of it all, a
hidden garden. 'Only Rumer Godden could make a simple tale of a
forbidden garden pulse with suspense' New York Herald Tribune Book
Review
Rumer Godden's The Diddakoi won the 1972 Whitbread Children's Book
Award. Everyone in Kizzy's town hates her because she's half-gypsy
- a diddakoi. But Kizzy doesn't care. All she needs is Gran and her
horse, Joe. But when Gran dies and their wagon burns down, Kizzy is
all alone. No one wants to look after her and her beloved Joe might
get sent to the knacker's yard. Can Kizzy survive in a hostile
world - and save Joe?
By the author of Black Narcissus and The River 'Godden was a writer
who constantly drew on her own life experiences' ROSIE THOMAS,
GUARDIAN 'Her prose is pure, delicate, and gently witty' NEW YORK
TIMES 'It has the rare illusive charm, the flashes of wit' KIRKUS
REVIEWS Tracy Quinn, daughter of a screen star and raised on film
sets around the world, returns to her adored family home, a country
house named China Court. Her grandmother's recent death has set in
motion events that threaten Tracy's future and the very existence
of China Court. As Tracy fights to save the old house, inhabited by
five generations of Quinns, the ancestors who created it are
evoked: profligate, faithless Jared; Eliza, the embittered
spinster; and Ripsie, an outcast orphan who rose to become the
powerful matriarch. China Court is the story of the hours and days
of a country house in Cornwall and five generations of the family
who inhabited it.
Ghosts past, present, and future haunt an old London house in this
masterful work of fiction from a New York Times bestselling author.
'A genius for storytelling' EVENING STANDARD 'One of our best and
most original novelists' PHILIP HENSHER 'Her craftsmanship is
always sure . . . pure, delicate, and gently witty' NEW YORK TIMES
Grizel Dane, a bold young servicewoman in the US army, arrives at
the London home of her great-uncle Sir Rollo Dane, seeking refuge
from the chaos of wartime. Through the old man, Grizel learns the
surprising history of the Dane family and Lark Ingoldsby. Orphaned
by a train crash, Lark was taken in by the Danes as an adoptive
daughter but soon found herself caught in a web of sibling rivalry,
love and attrition. Selina Dane, racked with jealousy, sets out to
destroy Lark's dreams of love. When Grizel falls for Pax Masterson,
a wounded airman, Rollo urges her to seize her chance for
happiness, as he was not able to. A century of a family's history
remains alive and vibrant within these walls, the events that
defined their lives unfolding over and over again. But that living
history is not ending quite yet, for the war is bringing a stranger
from America to Number 99 Wiltshire Place to leave her indelible
mark on it. A different kind of ghost story, Rumer Godden's
poignant, stylistically brilliant A Fugue in Time is a story rich
in wonder, imagination, and heart - a favourite for the many
devoted fans of the bestselling author of Black Narcissus and In
This House of Brede. A passionate story of romance and tragedy also
inspired the classic film Enchantment starring David Niven and
Teresa Wright.
Doone Penny is a child with a gift - he was born to dance. But
though others recognise his talent, there is little encouragement
from his family. His mother preens over his pretty sister, Crystal,
also a dancer, but fiercely competitive and vain. Doone's father
would never allow a son of his to have ballet lessons, and his
brothers think he's a sissy. But Doone has passion and ambition
beyond his years, and knows he can succeed, if only he is given the
chance. If he can make it into Queen's Chase, Her Majesty's Junior
Ballet School, he'll show them all ...
Five nuns confront nature--physical and human--in a remote
Himalayan convent in the bestselling novel that inspired the new FX
miniseries. Under the guidance of Sister Clodagh, the youngest
Mother Superior in the history of their order, five European
Sisters of the Servants of Mary leave their monastery in
Darjeeling, India, and make their way to remote Mopu in the
foothills of the Himalayan Mountains. There, in the opulent,
abandoned palace where an Indian general housed his harem, the holy
sisters hope to establish a school and a health clinic. Their aim
is to help combat superstition, ignorance, and disease among the
mistrusting natives in the village below, and to silence the doubts
of their royal benefactor's agent, the hard-drinking and somewhat
disreputable Mr. Dean. But all too soon, the isolation, the ghosts
and lurid history, and the literally breathtaking beauty of this
high, lonely place in the Asian mountains begin to take a serious
toll on Sister Clodagh and her fellow nuns. And their burdens may
prove too heavy to bear, exposing a vulnerable humanity that
threatens to undermine the best intentions of the purest hearts.
The basis for the Golden Globe and Academy Award-winning motion
picture starring Deborah Kerr, as well as the new miniseries on FX
starring Gemma Arterton, Black Narcissus has been universally
praised for its poignancy, passion, and rich evocation of a time
and place. An intensely human story of devotion, faith, and
madness, this beloved novel by the New York Times-bestselling
author of In This House of Brede stands among the finest fiction
written in the twentieth century. "Bears comparison with A Passage
to India." --Arthur Koestler
By the esteemed author of Black Narcissus. 'Her craftsmanship is
always sure; her understanding of character is compassionate and
profound; her prose is pure, delicate, and gently witty' New York
Times Harriet is caught between two worlds: her older sister is no
longer a playmate, her brother is still a little boy. And the
comforting rhythm of her Indian childhood - the sounds of the jute
factory, the colourful festivals that accompany each season and the
eternal ebb and flow of the river on its journey to the Bay of
Bengal - is about to be shattered by a tragic event. Intense,
vivid, and with a dark undertow, The River is a poignant portrait
of the loss of a young girl's innocence. 'The River will make you
laugh, make you cry and, in its way, change you forever' Julie
Myerson Available with Virago Modern Classics.
By the author of Black Narcissus and The River 'One of our best and
most captivating novelists' Philip Hensher 'Her craftsmanship is
always sure; her understanding of character is compassionate and
profound; her prose is pure, delicate, and gently witty' New York
Times In a crumbling Calcutta mansion, with faded frescos and a
jasmine-covered garden, the Lemarchant family live, clinging to the
fringes of respectability: neither Indian nor English, they are
accepted by no one and exploited by all. After only a day in India,
Stephen Bright meets Rosa Lemarchant. In an ill-fitting dress once
belonging to her sister, she is awkward and shy, and couldn't be
more different from the stories he has heard of fast 'Eurasian'
girls. Ignorant of Calcutta's strict codes of conformity, he falls
in love with Rosa and becomes enchanted by the building in which
she lives, determined to uncover its secrets. Mystery pervades this
story of a memory-haunted house in old Calcutta, as secret as a
sundial in a ruined garden.
BY THE NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLING AUTHOR 'One of our best and most
captivating novelists' PHILIP HENSHER '[Godden] writes with grace
and a cheerfully lilting prose' KIRKUS REVIEWS 'Her craftsmanship
is always sure' NEW YORK TIMES A revered effigy of the God, Shiva,
is missing from the Patna Hall Hotel on south India's exquisite
Coromandel coast. Was it stolen, and to whom does it belong? Young
lawyer Michael Dean, sent from London to argue the case for the
defence, falls under the spell of Artemis, a graceful archaeologist
who is staying at the hotel; but she proves as elusive as the
mystery of the theft he is working on. Her final novel, Cromartie
vs The God Shiva is a magical, evocative exploration of art, love,
class and greed set in Godden's beloved southern India.
By the author of Black Narcissus and An Episode of Sparrows WITH AN
INTRODUCTION BY BESTSELLING AUTHOR ROSIE THOMAS 'One of our best
and most captivating novelists' Philip Hensher Sophie, an English
ingenue with two children, arrives in Himalayan Kashmir to set up
home in a tumbledown cottage surrounded by flowers and herbs.
Settling down to live quietly, frugally and peacefully with her new
neighbours, she is unaware of the turmoil her arrival provokes as
the villagers compete fiercely for her patronage. But when Sophie's
cook makes a drastic bid to secure his position, the unwanted
consequences are catastrophic . . . Mesmerising and thoughtful,
this Godden's lesser-known classic evokes India's uniquely
beautiful landscape amidst a timeless tale of misunderstanding.
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