LoveReading4Kids Says
LoveReading4Kids Says
December 2021 Book of the Month
Tom is an orphan and as the celebrations for the end of term finish it seems he’ll be spending the summer alone at his boarding school. No wonder he accepts an invitation to visit the uncle he’s never met – indeed, never heard of – despite the strangeness of the message and its delivery.
Arriving at Mundham Farm, things get stranger yet, the boundaries between this world and that of the mysterious Folk, or Samdhya, seeming to shift in the summer heat, along with our understanding of time itself. His uncle’s home is a worse and more oppressive prison than school; can Tom find a way to escape and to free the other prisoners from his uncle’s control?
It’s a wonderfully heady and atmospheric adventure, exploring ideas of family, trust, power and freedom. Womack is a fine writer and this is one to recommend to fans of Frances Hardinge or Philip Reeve.
Andrea Reece
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About
Wildlord Synopsis
Tom Swinton is not looking forward to the summer. His parents are dead, and he is going to have to spend the holidays in his boarding school. But when he receives a mysterious letter inviting him to come to his uncle's farm, he is determined to go, even though he has never heard of this uncle, James Swinton, commonly known as Jack. His uncle seems genial enough at first; but the silver-haired and silver-eyed boy, Kit, who does most of the work about Mundham Farm, is fearful and strange; and the attractive young woman, Zita, who keeps house and prepares mysterious potions, is certainly no ordinary housekeeper. Jack reveals to Tom that he needs his help to protect the farm from unspecified forces, and his principal duty will be to work with Kit to "e;make the wards"e; - which is a way of surrounding the farm with some kind of magical protection. Jack explains that the farm can only be properly protected if a Swinton performs this ritual, and since Tom is the last of the line, it is up to him to protect Mundham. This is the first inkling Tom has that he may himself have magical powers. The forces threatening the farm are the Samdya, a tribe of noble but wild and violent supernatural beings, who sometimes take a kind of human form and for whom the balance of the world is important. Tom meets one of these mysterious beings in the woods near the farm, and she tells him that the reason the Samdhya are constantly attacking Mundham is because they want to rescue one of their number who has been held captive by Jack for many decades, maybe even centuries. By now, Tom knows that Zita and Kit are also held against their will on the farm and it is not long before he realises that he too has no way of escaping: he is bound by Jack's evil spells. Jack tries to win Tom over by offering to show him his dead parents, whom Tom longs to see, and for a while he is taken in by false images of his mother and father; but when he finally witnesses the scene of his parents' death by drowning, the awful realisation dawns that it was Jack who summoned up the terrible storm that swept over the boat and killed them. When Jack imprisons Kit, Zita and Tom in what appears to be a glass box, but is really a kind of parallel world, it takes all of Zita's considerable magical powers to help them escape, but they are not free for long. Tom confronts Jack on several occasions, but Jack is very powerful and always emerges victorious. When the awful sound of the Samdhya wardrums announces that they are gathering and are about to descend on the farm to rescue the captive, Tom knows he must find a way to overcome his enemy. Once Jack is defeated, trapped inside his own magical creation and flung to his death, the farm and its inhabitants are released from the painful spells in which he had enmeshed them, and peace is restored between the Samdhya and the humans.
About This Edition
ISBN: |
9781915071156 |
Publication date: |
25th October 2022 |
Author: |
Philip Womack |
Publisher: |
Little Island Books |
Format: |
Digital Product (Other) |
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Press Reviews
Philip Womack Press Reviews
A magical tale of malevolence, which spirits readers away on a journey through history and mystery. -- Pet O'Connell - The Echo
'Ancient sorcery and wild magic clash in this thrilling tale which explores love, loss, and the power of friendship. -- Katherine Langrish
Fans of Sarah Maria Griffin's Other Words for Smoke will enjoy this darkly glittering and malevolently magical tale of found family, betrayal and power. -- Fiona Murphy - Paper Lanterns
If you're looking for a gripping adventure with a supernatural edge, this is just the ticket. - City Kids
A gripping, morally complex fantasy by one of my favourite YA writers. Philip Womack deserves to be much more widely read. -- Meg Rosoff
A beautifully written, highly imaginative fantasy adventure. -- Anne Cunningham - The Meath Chronicle
Philip Womack is a writer of huge talent Daily Telegraph
Author
About Philip Womack
Philip Womack was born in Chichester in the middle of a thunderstorm in 1981.
He was educated at Lancing, and Oriel College, Oxford, where he read Classics and English. He lives in London.
He is currently a Contributing Editor at Literary Review and writes for The Daily Telegraph and The Guardian, among other papers; he is also a Fellow at First Story, currently being Writer in Residence at St Augustine's in Kilburn. He has led workshops on Greek Tragedy and How to Write Children's Fiction for the How To: Academy.
Read a Q&A with the author here.
More About Philip Womack