The Stolen Lake
Juvenile FictionActionAdventure

The Stolen Lake

by Joan Aiken

Publisher
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Pages
323
Language
English
Published
1981

Overview

<p> <b>In this fantasy adventure, a young girl visits a land where birds carry off men, fish eat human flesh, and she must rescue a pilfered lake.</b> <br> Readers who have followed Dido Twite's escapades in <i>Black Hearts in Battersea</i> and <i>Nightbirds on Nantucket </i>will welcome her return in her wildest escapade yet. <br> Now back in print, <i>The Cuckoo Tree </i>and <i>The Stolen Lake</i> continue the Wolves Chronicles, the exhilarating and imaginative series that stemmed from Joan Aiken's classic <i>The Wolves of Willoughby Chase</i>. <br> A dazzling piece of dramatic, snowballing adventure, <i>The Stolen Lake</i> is full of fantastical details: revolving palaces, witches who are also court dressmakers, an apocalyptic volcanic eruption, and an infernal country with a noticeable lack of female children. On her way back to London aboard the British man-of-war <i>Thrush</i>, twelve-year-old Dido Twite finds herself and the crew summoned to the aid of the tyrannical queen of New Cumbria. A neighboring king has stolen the queen's lake and is holding it for ransom, and it's up to Dido and the crew to face fire, flood, execution, and wild beasts to get the lake back—or else. <br> <b>Perfect for fans of Lemony Snicket and Roald Dahl</b> <br> "Aiken lures us into historical fantasy . . . our interest never slows." — <i>School Library Journal</i> <br> "The adventure Miss Aiken has dished up . . . in <i>The Stolen Lake </i>is zanier and more devilishly fiendish than ever." — <i>New York Times</i> </p>

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