Synopses & Reviews
Thirteen-year-old William Constant and his two younger sisters, Mary and Alice, have come to ancient, mysterious Golden House in Wales for the holidays. Their lives will never be the same once they enter the Magician's House -- and discover their destiny.
The Secret of Magic
It's vacation again -- time for William, Mary, and Alice to return to Golden House. They've made a solemn vow not to speak of anything that happened on their last visit to Uncle Jack's home. Was the magic real? It seems like a dream to William and Mary. Only Alice knows the secret of magic: believing. It is alice who discovers the Dark and Dreadful Path, Alice who is irresistibly drawn to the ancient yew tree. And it is Alice who finds the door in the tree -- leading to the secret hiding place of the Magician. It wasn't a dream!
Soon they've become the Magician's students, led by the kestel, the badgers, and the dog into the most perilous assignment of all....
About the Author
William Corlett, after being educated at Fettes College in Edinburgh, trained as an actor at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, in London. He soon started writing plays for the theater, including
The Gentle Avalanche and
Return Ticket, which were performed in London. Many television plays followed, including the award-winning series
Barriers, for which he received the Gold Award at the New York International Film and television Festival. His script for the children's series
The Paper Lads won him another Writer's Guild Award for Best Children's Writer.
Between 1978 and 1988, William wrote a number of novels for young adults, including the Gate of Eden, The Land Beyond, Return to the Gate, The Dark Side of the Moon, Bloxworth Blue, and The secret Line. He also co-wrote The Question Series, which is a series of six books about world religions. His adaptation of the Jill Paton Walsh novel Torch was filmed by Edinburgh Films during 1990 and earned him another nomination for the Writer's Guild Best Children's Writer of the Year Award. In addition, his adaptation of the Elizabeth Goudge novel The Little White Horse, was shown on BBC in 1994 and won a Silver Award at the New York International Film and TV Festival. William went on to write the highly acclaimed and best-selling Magician's House Quartet, orginally published by the Bodley Head, which recently became a major BBC television series. The Summer of the Haunting, a contemporary ghost story, is his most recent novel for young readers.
Table of Contents
Contents1 Hide-and-Seek
2 "Kee! Kee!"
3 The Two Paths
4 Brock
5 The Writing on the Floor
6 The Yew Tree
7 The Magician's Lair
8 Meg Lewis Tells Her Story
9 Phoebe Reads the Riot Act
10 The Writing on the Mirror
11 The Map
12 "A Bit of Magic"
13 Alice Goes It Alone
14 The Swallows Have Come
15 The Builders Return
16 The Lights in the Dark
17 The Sett
18 The Alchemy Begins to Work
19 Alice Loses Her Temper
20 Four Fields
21 The Storm Clouds Gather
22 "A Lewis Returns to Golden House"
23 Jasper and Cinnabar
24 The Dark and Dreadful Path
25 Bawson
26 A Fair Wind and a Full Moon