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A Traveller in Time

A Traveller in Time

List Price: $2.95
Your Price: $2.95
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A lovely, lovely book
Review: Alison Uttley is a quiet writer, unpretentious and understated. I adore A Traveller in Time which tells a wistful and enchanting tale using the tried and tested device of a child slipping accidentally into another time. It brings to life the period of history when Mary Queen of Scots was imprisoned by Elizabeth and when plots were rife as well as recounting the way history is woven into the very fabric of a place. Truly lovely.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wonderful
Review: I first saw A Traveller in Time on TV in Ireland in the 80s, and had to buy the book. What a delight for all ages.The book tells the story of Penelope who on a visit to her Aunt and Uncle's farm in Derbyshire, travels back to the 16th century. Penelope meets the Babington family who tried unsuccessfully to free the captive Mary Queeen of Scots from nearby Wingfield Manor.Alison Uttley's characters are so convincing, and her descriptions of 16th century life so vivid. All the places in book also exist and can be seen today.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wonderful!
Review: I found this book at a second-hand bookstore a few years ago and I consider it one of my luckiest second-hand finds. This is a suspenseful, exciting, heartwarming story. The era of Mary of Scots is presented in wonderful familliarity, and is very natural. I find it hard to believe that this book has willingly gone out of print.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Pure magic...
Review: I loved this book when I was young, and it inspired me to read everything I could about Mary Queen of Scots. The author pulls you into the story, and doesn't let you go until it's over. The imagery and descriptions are unforgettable. A wonderful story.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: an avid reader's most fondly remembered book from childhood
Review: In early twentieth century England, a young girl finds she is able to slip between her own time and sixteenth century England to take her place among her ancestors, a family of servants to a Catholic nobleman's family. The Babingtons are fiercely loyal to Mary, Queen of Scots, at that time imprisoned by Queen Bess. From the descriptions of the country kitchen, to her budding romance with the nobleman's young kinsman, this book stays in one's memory long after others have faded.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A wonderful adventure that will enthral
Review: My mother bought this book for me when I was about ten as I had very much enjoyed the author's Little Grey Rabbit stories. I have never forgotten it and am now ordering another copy for my own nine-year-old daughter in the hope that she will love it as much as I still do. Oh to be able to step back in time to Elizabethan England at the push of a door, like the story's central character Penelope! Together with the Babington family who live at Thackers in the earlier time period which she is able to visit, she becomes involved in a plot to rescue the doomed Mary Queen of Scots. This is a marvellous adventure that will captivate any imaginative reader with an interest in 'the olden days'. Books such as this that blend exciting adventures with historically accurate descriptions and evocative writing styles must surely be the best way for children to assimilate knowledge of history. This book IS still in print - I have ordered a copy from Amazon.co.uk and it ships in 24 hours. Also try The Country Child, by Alison Uttley, and The Armourer's House by Rosemary Sutcliff, set in Tudor London - two other gems that I still love thirty-odd years on.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The most convincing time travel story I've ever read
Review: Reading this book, it is hard to believe that the author has not actually visited the 16th century in person. The heroine, Penelope, staying with her great-aunt Tissie and great-uncle Barnabas at Thackers Farm in Derbyshire, finds herself unexpectedly able to pass back and forth from the present (late 19th century) to the reign of Elizabeth I. Here she meets the Babington family, who plot to save mary Queen of Scots from captivity in nearby Wingfield Manor. Her distant ancestor, Cicely Taverner, is cook to the Babbington family, and the descriptions of the servants lives and conversations are utterly convincing, more so than the rather romanticised upper-class Babbingtons. The Thackers Farm of the past comes to be more real to penelope than the present-day place. The escape of the Queen of SCots is doomed to fail, and Penelope knows it, but can do nothing to change history. I understand Alison Uttley had plans to write a sequel to this lovely book, it is fascinating but frustrating to imagine what it would have been like.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The most convincing time travel story I've ever read
Review: Reading this book, it is hard to believe that the author has not actually visited the 16th century in person. The heroine, Penelope, staying with her great-aunt Tissie and great-uncle Barnabas at Thackers Farm in Derbyshire, finds herself unexpectedly able to pass back and forth from the present (late 19th century) to the reign of Elizabeth I. Here she meets the Babington family, who plot to save mary Queen of Scots from captivity in nearby Wingfield Manor. Her distant ancestor, Cicely Taverner, is cook to the Babbington family, and the descriptions of the servants lives and conversations are utterly convincing, more so than the rather romanticised upper-class Babbingtons. The Thackers Farm of the past comes to be more real to penelope than the present-day place. The escape of the Queen of SCots is doomed to fail, and Penelope knows it, but can do nothing to change history. I understand Alison Uttley had plans to write a sequel to this lovely book, it is fascinating but frustrating to imagine what it would have been like.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A wonderful adventure that will enthral
Review: This book combined my love of English history with an inquisitive daring modern day heroine. I still have my copy but wish it were still in print so others could discover and love it as much as I have.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: my absolute favorite book from when I was twelve.
Review: This book combined my love of English history with an inquisitive daring modern day heroine. I still have my copy but wish it were still in print so others could discover and love it as much as I have.


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