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ISBN
921870-63-9
5 x 7 5/8
128 pp, $8.95
Children's Literature
Novel
Ages: 8-12

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The Keeper
of the Trees
By Beverly Brenna
This modern fantasy novel set in
London — for children ages 8 to 12 — tells the story of Elizabeth, a
twelve-year-old Canadian girl who feels homesick and lonely after her
mother's death when her father moves them to London. Soon, however,
she meets an assortment of unusual characters and a strange adventure
unfolds. Among her new friends is Maud, the homeless woman in the
park, who befriends her and teaches her the magic of the great
chestnut trees. Bur friendship works two ways and soon Elizabeth must
shoulder Maud's job as "Keeper of the Trees", protecting the
tiny horses which run from the Otherworld to support life on Earth.
Evil forces appear in the shape of the Hunter whom Elizabeth must face
as she battles to keep alive the trees on whose survival hang the
lives of many people, including Elizabeth's young friend Thomas. The
high seriousness of her role hits home when Maud explains, "Each
species lost takes a thread from the fabric of life." Lines of
classical poetry strengthen mood and theme in a tale which links past
to present, country to country in a celebration of the natural world.
Readers walk the wire between the real and the unreal, carefully lured
into the fantastic by Brenna's skilful depiction of the everyday, then
whoosh — the reader balances on something hardly to be believed ...
but maybe...
"Magic, strange happenings in
a London park, memorable characters and an intriguing plot woven
tightly together by Bev Brenna's lyrical writing, as well as
quotations from well-loved poetry: The Keeper of the Trees
is a superb read!" — Ann Walsh
(A separate teachers' guide is
available, also by Beverley Brenna, who has a M.Ed. and taught for
five years prior to raising her own children)
Beverley Brenna is a writer and
storyteller/puppeteer who lives with her husband and three sons on a
small acreage near Saskatoon, Sask. She is a member of ACTRA and a
winner of two Saskatchewan Writers' Guild Awards for short fiction and
children's literature. Her two previous books are Spider Summer
(Nelson, 1998) and the Smithsonian picture book Daddy
Longlegs at Birch Lane (Soundprints Press, 1997).
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