Available Formats
The Green Children of Woolpit
By (Author) J. Anderson Coats
Simon & Schuster
Atheneum Books for Young Readers
1st October 2019
United States
Children
Fiction
FIC
Hardback
272
Width 140mm, Height 210mm, Spine 25mm
354g
An eerie, spine-tingling fantasy about a young girl who discovers two otherworldly childrenand an ancient bargain that threatens to destroy them all.
It is the autumn of 1160, and twelve-year-old Agnes is helping with the harvest when she hears a frightened voice calling from the nearby woods. When she goes to investigate, Agnes cant believe what she sees. There, at the bottom of the deep wolf traps, are two children. They are shouting in a language no one understandsand their skin is bright green.
Agnes soon discovers that these are no ordinary children; in fact, they arent even human. They are of the Fair Folk, and they are here to take Agnes home to their world. Trusting that the Fair Folk cannot lie, Agnes agrees to venture underground. But she soon learns just how dangerous their world isand what it will take to break the ancient bargain meant to keep her there.
Based on a classic British legend, this deliciously creepy novel from acclaimed author J. Anderson Coats is perfect for fans of Doll Bones and Coraline.
Agness voice is precise, distinctive, and very beautiful, and her penchant for dreaminess underlines her difference from the other villagersa quality that makes her vulnerable to Sennas enticing lies. Senna is a sharp, survivalist foil for dreamy, good-hearted Agnes, and her history as a victim of brutal imperial conquest garners readerly sympathy even as she attempts to assume Agnes identity. . . .Agnes secure love for her family and her belief in the life-shaping power of stories bind this bittersweet book together. As Agnes says, There should be more stories where girls help one another. -- BCCB
There are multiple plot twists, alternating narrative voices (Senna, the girl Agnes replaces in the underground fairy world, has her own tale to tell), and frequent surprises due to the shifting illusions devised by the fairy folk. Through it all, Coatss story maintains its strong central theme: Agness determination to become the hero of a storyone that turns out to feature two girls helping each other. -- The Horn Book
Fraught with excitement and peril. Coats skillfully weaves in facts about the Fair Folk, Agness parents, and the coming of the Romans to Britain in this tale that hearkens back to a medieval story first recorded by monks." -- School Library Journal
J. Anderson Coats has masters degrees in history and library science and has published short stories in numerous literary magazines and anthologies. She is the author of the acclaimed novelsThe Wicked and the Just,The Many Reflections of Miss Jane Deming,R Is for Rebel,The Green Children of Woolpit,andThe Night Ride, as well asA Season Most Unfair. She lives with her family in Washington State. Visit her at JAndersonCoats.com.