Margins
The Apple-Stone book cover
The Apple-Stone
1965
First Published
4.08
Average Rating
230
Number of Pages
It was an odd-looking apple—dull yellow and crinkled all over with age—but it had a nice smell. And, as they soon learned, that's not all it had. "It's Magic," said Missie. The others—her older brother Jeremy, her sister Jo, and their cousins, Douglas and Nigel—scoffed. BUT..."A very sensible thing to say," said the apple stone, and went on to admit modestly that, "One touch from me animates the inanimate." As good as its word, the apple stone, with its remarkable and sometimes dangerous talent, led the five of them into one incredible adventure after another with things that were never meant to be alive: the leopard-skin rug, a model rocket ship, and a bookend in the shape of an elephant, to mention only a few. Lots of surprises and zany humor highlight this charming fantasy, in which the true-to-life quality of the gang—bossy Jeremy, Missie, Jo, and the quarreling cousins—adds to the fun.
Avg Rating
4.08
Number of Ratings
79
5 STARS
39%
4 STARS
34%
3 STARS
22%
2 STARS
5%
1 STARS
0%
goodreads

Author

Nicholas Stuart Gray
Nicholas Stuart Gray
Author · 11 books

Nicholas Stuart Gray (23 October 1922, Scotland - 17 March 1981) was a British actor and playwright, perhaps best known for his work in children's theatre in England. He was also an author of children's fantasy; he wrote a number of novels, a dozen plays, and many short stories. Neil Gaiman has written that Gray "is one of those authors I loved as a boy who holds up even better on rereading as an adult". Many other modern fantasy authors, such as Hilari Bell, Cecilia Dart-Thornton, Kate Forsyth, Cassandra Golds, Katherine Langrish, Sophie Masson, and Garth Nix, cite Gray's work as something they enjoyed as children. Perhaps his best-known books are The Seventh Swan and Grimbold's Other World. Gray often produced adaptations or continuations of traditional fairy tales and fantasy works, as in his Further Adventures of Puss in Boots. His The Stone Cage is a re-telling of Rapunzel from a cat's point of view. Over The Hills to Fabylon is about a city whose king has the ability to make it fly off across the mountains if he feels it is in danger. Gray maintained a long-term collaborative relationship with set designer and illustrator Joan Jefferson Farjeon (sister of Eleanor Farjeon and Harry Farjeon); she supplied the costume and scenic designs for many of the theatrical productions of his plays, as well as the illustrations of his books. —-from wikipedia

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