EntertainmentLocal news

Fabulous reads: Get lost in new fantasy

Book Overview - The Land of Lost Things by John Connolly,

The Land of Lost Things, John Connolly, Hodder & Stoughton, ISBN: 9781529391817

TWICE upon a time – for that is how some stories should continue…

Phoebe, an eight-year-old girl, lies comatose following a car accident. She is a body without a spirit, a stolen child.

Ceres, her mother, can only sit by her bedside and read aloud to Phoebe the fairy stories she loves in the hope they might summon her back to this world. But it is hard to keep faith, so very hard.

Now an old house on the hospital grounds, a property connected to a book written by a vanished author, is calling to Ceres.

Something wants her to enter, and to journey – to a land coloured by the memories of Ceres’s childhood, and the folklore beloved of her father, to a land of witches and dryads, giants and mandrakes; to a land where old enemies are watching, and waiting.

To the Land of Lost Things.

This is for anyone who loved The Book of Lost Things and for all readers who enjoy dark, beautifully written fables that explore the heart of the human condition:
love, loyalty and sacrifice.

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

John Connolly is author of the Charlie Parker mysteries, The Book of Lost Things, the Samuel Johnson novels for young adults and, with his partner, Jennifer Ridyard, co-author of the Chronicles of the Invaders. John Connolly’s debut – Every Dead Thing – introduced the character of Private Investigator Charlie Parker, and swiftly launched him right into the front rank of thriller writers.

All his subsequent novels have been Sunday Times bestsellers. He was the winner of the 2016 CWA Short Story Dagger for On the Anatomization of an Unknown Man (1637) by Frans Mier from NIGHT MUSIC Nocturnes Vol 2.

In 2007 he was awarded the Irish Post Award for Literature. He was the first non-American writer to win the US Shamus award and the first Irish writer to win an Edgar award.

Books to Die For, which he edited with Declan Burke, was the winner of the 2013 Anthony, Agatha and Macavity awards for Best Non-Fiction work.

Related Articles

Back to top button