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Crown of Acorns book cover
Crown of Acorns
2010
First Published
3.29
Average Rating
288
Number of Pages
An intriguing mystery from the author of INCARCERON. A teenage girl arrives in a city: new name, new identity, new foster family. But, nursing a secret from early childhood, she is terrified her identity will be spotted. A parallel narrative shows Zac, a young architect’s apprentice working in 1750 with Jonathan Forrest, a man obsessed with Druidic mysteries and a new architectural vision for the city. His plan to create the world’s first circular terraced street, the King’s Circus, is scorned. Soon Zac realises Forrest is not just obsessed with an architectural dream; there are secrets, the construction of a hidden chamber in the centre of the Circus. Framing these stories is the voice of Bladud, mythical first builder of the city, destined to die in trying to fly... Three threads, weaving together towards a brilliant and thrilling climax.
Avg Rating
3.29
Number of Ratings
262
5 STARS
12%
4 STARS
28%
3 STARS
41%
2 STARS
14%
1 STARS
5%
goodreads

Author

Catherine Fisher
Catherine Fisher
Author · 37 books

Catherine Fisher was born in Newport, Wales. She graduated from the University of Wales with a degree in English and a fascination for myth and history. She has worked in education and archaeology and as a lecturer in creative writing at the University of Glamorgan. She is a Fellow of the Welsh Academy. Catherine is an acclaimed poet and novelist, regularly lecturing and giving readings to groups of all ages. She leads sessions for teachers and librarians and is an experienced broadcaster and adjudicator. She lives in Newport, Gwent. Catherine has won many awards and much critical acclaim for her work. Her poetry has appeared in leading periodicals and anthologies and her volume Immrama won the WAC Young Writers' Prize. She won the Cardiff International Poetry Competition in 1990. Her first novel, The Conjuror's Game, was shortlisted for the Smarties Books prize and The Snow-Walker's Son for the W.H.Smith Award. Equally acclaimed is her quartet The Book of the Crow, a classic of fantasy fiction. The Oracle, the first volume in the Oracle trilogy, blends Egyptian and Greek elements of magic and adventure and was shortlisted for the Whitbread Children's Books prize. The trilogy was an international bestseller and has appeared in over twenty languages. The Candleman won the Welsh Books Council's Tir Na n'Og Prize and Catherine was also shortlisted for the remarkable Corbenic, a modern re-inventing of the Grail legend. Her futuristic novel Incarceron was published to widespread praise in 2007, winning the Mythopoeic Society of America's Children's Fiction Award and selected by The Times as its Children's Book of the Year. The sequel, Sapphique, was published in September 2008.

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