The
Serial Garden: The Complete Armitage Family Stories
Joan Aiken
October 28, 2008
9781931520577 · Trade cloth · 5.5 x 8.5 · 350 pp
· $20
-- Buy
-- Mail Order
-- Ebook
-- Fictionwise
-- Powells
-- Our
Local Bookstore
-- Your
Local Bookstore
A
Celebration of the Armitage Family!
Books of Wonder, Nov. 16th.
This is the first complete collection
of Joan Aiken's beloved Armitage stories — and it includes four
new, unpublished stories.
After Mrs. Armitage makes a wish,
the Armitage family has interesting and unusual experiences every Monday
(and the occasional Tuesday). The Board of Incantation tries to take
over their house to use as a school for young wizards; the Furies come
to stay; and a cutout from a cereal box leads into a beautiful and tragic
palace garden. Charming and magical, the uncommon lives of the Armitage
family will thrill and delight readers young and old.
The Serial Garden includes
Joan Aiken's Prelude to the series from Armitage, Armitage, Fly
Away Home, as well as introductions from Joan Aiken's daughter,
Lizza Aiken, and best-selling author Garth Nix, and is illustrated by
Andi Watson.
Free
Download: download
a DRM-free PDF of an unpublished Armitage family story, "Don't
Go Fishing on Witches' Day," along with the introduction by Lizza
Aiken or read it online.
The Serial Garden
is the first title in our new imprint for readers of all ages: Big Mouth
House.
Readers
say:
"Joan Aiken's invention seemed
inexhaustible, her high spirits a blessing, her sheer storytelling
zest a phenomenon. She was a literary treasure, and her books will
continue to delight for many years to come."
—Philip Pullman
"The Armitages’ wacky
magic (usually a Monday occurrence) and that of their fantastical
town, a place filled with witches and magical beings, rises from the
pages when matters go slightly awry, in the manner of Edward Eager
and E. Nesbit."
—Kirkus Reviews
"One of the ingredients which
add such a sense of playful wit to Aiken's stories -- and which make
them so worth rereading -- is her genius for wordplay, and this is
perhaps most obvious in the fabulous names she gives characters, such
as Miss Hooting, Mrs. Mildew, Admiral Lycanthrope, and Lady Nightwood.
The title of "The Serial Garden" itself is a play on words,
and it is the intelligence and the cleverness of Aiken's prose which
make these stories so suitable for readers of any age.
"With the publication of The Serial Collection readers
of all ages have the opportunity to enjoy some of the best writing
by one of the most superb and timeless fantasy writers."
—Green
Man Review
"Joan Aiken wrote Armitage
Family stories her whole life, and they are a treat."
—The
Cultural Gutter
"These are admirable stories
for any age because they are dug from a delightful mind. Many will
drop into their readers lives like those enriching stones which break
the surfaces of still pools and leave rings long after their splash."
—Times Literary Supplement
"Whether scary, satiric,
or poetic, Aiken's tales have strong settings, memorable characters,
insight, and humor."
—School Library Journal
"A consummate story-teller."
— The Times
"A writer of wild humor and
unrestrained imagination."
—Oxford Companion to Children's Literature
"With its fine-tuned combination
of folklore and fun. . . . a good source of imaginative tales to read
alone or aloud." —Booklist
"The best kind of writer,
strange and spooky and surprising, never sentimental or whimsical."
—Kelly Link (Magic for Beginners)
"Joan Aiken's magic stories
have the right mixture . . . distinguished and sometimes beautiful
writing and always in a frame-work of logic." —Naomi Mitchison,
New Statesman
"This year can boast one
genuine small masterpiece. . . . The Wolves of Willoughby Chase
. . . almost a copybook lesson in those virtues that a classic children's
book must possess."
—Time Magazine
Table of Contents
Introduction by Lizza Aiken
Introduction by Garth Nix
Prelude by Joan Aiken
Yes, but Today Is Tuesday
Broomsticks and Sardines
The Frozen Cuckoo
Sweet Singeing in The Choir
The Ghostly Governess
Harriet's Birthday Present
Dragon Monday
Armitage, Armitage, Fly Away Home (also known as "A Batch of
Magic Wands")
Rocket Full of Pie
Doll's House to Let, Mod. Con.
Tea at Ravensburgh
The Land of Trees and Heroes
Harriet's Hairloom
The Stolen Quince Tree
The Apple of Trouble
The Serial Garden
Mrs. Nutti's Fireplace
The Looking-Glass Tree
Miss Hooting's Legacy
Kitty Snickersnee
Goblin Mujsic
The Chinese Dragon
Don't Go Fishing on Witches' Day
Milo's New Word
On the web:
Publication
history
"Yes, but Today Is Tuesday,"
"The Frozen Cuckoo," "Sweet Singeing in The Choir,"
"The Ghostly Governess," "Harriet's Birthday Present,"
"Dragon Monday"
All You've Ever Wanted (1953)
"Armitage, Armitage Fly Away
Home," "Rocket Full of Pie," "Doll's House to Let,
Mod. Con.," "Tea at Ravensburgh"
More Than You Bargained For (1957)
"The Land of Trees and Heroes,"
"Harriet's Hairloom," "The Stolen Quince Tree,"
"The Apple of Trouble," "The Serial Garden"
Armitage, Armitage Fly Away Home (1968)
"Broomsticks and Sardines"
A Small Pinch of Weather (1969)
"Mrs. Nutti's Fireplace"
A Harp of Fishbones (1972)
"The Looking-Glass Tree"
The Faithless Lollybird (1977)
"Miss Hooting's Legacy"
Up the Chimney Down (1984)
"Milo's New Word"
Moon Cake and Other Stories (1998)
Reproduced by permission of Hodder and Stoughton Limited.
"Kitty Snickersnee," "Goblin
Music," "The Chinese Dragon," "Don't Go Fishing
on Witches' Day"
The Serial Garden: The Complete Armitage Family Stories (2008)
Credits
- Cover art © Beth Adams.
Download cover for print.
- Photo credit: Photo by Rod Delroy.
Download for print.