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Be Sure: Wayward Children, Books 1-3, by Seanan McGuire. The Hugo Award–winning Wayward Children series (Every Heart a Doorway, Down Among the Sticks and Bones, and Beneath the Sugar Sky, all ...
From 'Children of Blood and Bone' to 'A Wrinkle in Time,' here are the 20 best fantasy books to indulge your inner child.
The Animals of Farthing Wood (book) The Anubis Tapestry; Aquamarine (novel) Archer's Goon; The Archives of Anthropos; Aru Shah and the City of Gold; Aru Shah and the End of Time; Aru Shah and the Song of Death; Aru Shah and the Tree of Wishes; Ascendance Series; At the Back of the North Wind; Attica (novel) Awake and Dreaming; An Awfully ...
Fablehaven is a fantasy book series for children written by Brandon Mull. [1] The book series, which includes Fablehaven, Fablehaven: Rise of the Evening Star, Fablehaven: Grip of the Shadow Plague, Fablehaven: Secrets of the Dragon Sanctuary and Fablehaven: Keys to the Demon Prison, is published by Shadow Mountain in hardcover and Simon & Schuster in paperback.
Vega Jane is a series of four young adult fantasy novels written by American author David Baldacci.It follows the adventures of a teenage girl as she uncovers secrets about the fictional village of Wormwood and faces the dangers of the 'Quag', a forest filled with beasts. [2]
Wayward Children is a series of fantasy novellas by American author Seanan McGuire. It takes place at a boarding school for children who have journeyed to magical lands and been forcibly returned to the real world. The volumes alternate between being set at the school versus showing the lives of the children while they were in their alternate ...
The Dark Is Rising Sequence is a series of five contemporary fantasy novels for older children and young adults that were written by the British author Susan Cooper and published from 1965 to 1977. The first book in the series, Over Sea, Under Stone , was originally conceived as a stand-alone novel, [ 2 ] and the sequence gets its name from the ...
Initial recognition for the book was from children's-book critics, among whom it garnered acclaim. [10] [34] A Wizard of Earthsea received an even more positive response in the United Kingdom when it was released there in 1971, which, according to White, reflected the greater admiration of British critics for children's fantasy. [35]