On This Page
Description
A mysterious trip to the desolate Northern Isles soon turns into a terrifying adventure when Bill is kidnapped! Marooned far from the mainland on a deserted coast, Philip, Dinah, Lucy-Ann, Jack and Kiki the parrot find themselves playing a dangerous game with an unknown enemy. Will they escape with Bill and their lives?Tags
Recommendations
Member Recommendations
Member Reviews
Good pre-adventure part, with the children recovering from measles and sent on a holiday to regain their strength before returning to school (yeah, like that's going to happen in real life, but you can't blame kids for dreaming!), Bill visiting in secret while being hunted by criminals (isn't he putting the children and Mrs. Manning in danger?)... good stuff!
The adventure part is fine, but maybe not as exciting as the previous novel (The Valley of Adventure, which is probably my favorite in the series). We get the weird criminal plots and the dangerous situations characteristic of the Adventure series, and there are some very funny elements that make the story better, like the birds Puffin and Huffin, and Horace Tipperlong (aka show more Tripalong).
Very enjoyable. show less
The adventure part is fine, but maybe not as exciting as the previous novel (The Valley of Adventure, which is probably my favorite in the series). We get the weird criminal plots and the dangerous situations characteristic of the Adventure series, and there are some very funny elements that make the story better, like the birds Puffin and Huffin, and Horace Tipperlong (aka show more Tripalong).
Very enjoyable. show less
I've been finding my "Sunday" reading insufficiently satisfying for a while of late, craving something with more intellectual stimulation. But now that I'm madly trying to prepare for Uni, unable to keep up with all the things that have to be done by the end of February, including reading lots of incomprehensible bumph on the "information society", Enid Blyton suddenly seems like a major haven. I could happily wrap myself up in Blyton for ages and just live in the world of imagination she offers. Which is clearly what always attracted me. Just goes to show that I needed to be doing something again - just perhaps not quite so frantically or intensely...
Loved this! Another great installment in Blyton's Adventure series. I'd read it a long time ago but couldn't remember how it all turned out - the best kind of re-read.
I have these novels as a box set and I'm reading them in the order in which the title is printed on the box. This one was next so I assumed (incorrectly) that it was the next one in the series. It seems to be the last one. A lot a lot of other adventures took place between the first one I read and this one -- I'm curious how old the children are now. They seemed to be more mature and know each other better than I was expecting, since I expected this one to be the second book in the series.
Fun read anyhow :-)
Adrianne
Fun read anyhow :-)
Adrianne
I thought the 'Adventure' series were even better than the Famous Five, in terms of exictment. Now of course I think it's all the same plot. But I'm 25 so really am not the target audience.
Novels/novelettes
NET FORCE
Members
- Recently Added By
Lists
Children's Chapter Books from 1940s, ...
77 works; 4 members
Kidnapping -- children's/young adult fiction
598 works; 3 members
Books Read in 2016
4,666 works; 199 members
Books With Water Words in the Title
186 works; 12 members
Author Information

2,537+ Works 111,844 Members
Enid Blyton, 1897 - November 28, 1968 Enid Blyton was born in London in 1897. She was educated in a private school and thought that she would become a musician until she realized that writing was her passion. She attended Ipswich High School where she trained to become a kindergarten teacher and eventually opened her own school for infants. show more Blyton's first poem was published in 1917, entitled "Have You-" which appeared in Nash's Magazine. In 1922, her first book of verses was published, entitled "Child Whispers." In 1926 she accepted a position editing the children's magazine "Sunny Stories" as well as writing the column "Teachers World." Blyton's first full length children's book was published din 1938 and was titled "The Secret Island." After working on the column for years, Blyton quit "Teachers World" in 1945 and also ended her stint as editor of "Sunny Stories" seven years later. In 1953 she started her own children's magazine called "The Edith Blyton Magazine" which featured stories about her characters and news on the clubs formed around them. Her most famous stories were those of the "Famous Five" The Magazine closed in 1959. In the 50's and 60's Blyton was criticized for the language in her book, for being to simple, but some 300 are still in print today. Blyton has published over 600 books in the course of her career. Enid Blyton died in her sleep on November 28, 1968. She was 71 years old. show less
Some Editions
Series
Belongs to Publisher Series
Pop-serien (403)
Work Relationships
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- The Sea of Adventure
- Original title
- The Sea of Adventure
- Original publication date
- 1948
- People/Characters
- Philip Mannering; Dinah Mannering; Jack Trent; Lucy-Ann Trent; Kiki (parrot); Bill Cunningham (Bill Smugs) (show all 8); Alison Mannering (Aunt Allie); Horace Tipperlong
- Related movies
- The Enid Blyton Adventure Series (1996 | IMDb)
- First words
- "Do you know, it's May the fifth already!" said Jack, in a very gloomy voice. "All the fellows will be back at school today."
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)"The Sea of Adventure," said Lucy-Ann, looking down at its vast expanse of dark blue, touched here and there with the golden reflection of the sky. "Good-bye, Sea of Adventure! You're a lovely place - but much too exciting for me!"
- Original language
- English
Classifications
- Genres
- Children's Books, Fiction and Literature
- DDC/MDS
- 823.912 — Literature & rhetoric English & Old English literatures English fiction 1900- 1901-1999 1901-1945
- LCC
- PZ7 .B629 .S — Language and Literature Fiction and juvenile belles lettres Fiction and juvenile belles lettres Juvenile belles lettres
- BISAC
Statistics
- Members
- 859
- Popularity
- 31,779
- Reviews
- 9
- Rating
- (3.76)
- Languages
- 13 — Danish, Dutch, English, Finnish, French, German, Icelandic, Latvian, Norwegian (Bokmål), Portuguese, Spanish, Swedish, Turkish
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 45
- UPCs
- 1
- ASINs
- 24

































































