Magic
by Sarah Brown (Editor), Gil McNeil (Editor)
On This Page
Description
Foreword by J K Rowling, Ambassador for the National Council for One Parent Families Put a little magic in your life - a fantastic collection of new short stories by some of the most exciting writers in Britain today. With sixteen brand new stories written by some of the most exciting and popular writers in British fiction today.Tags
Recommendations
Member Reviews
Very uneven anthology from a broad range of british writers. Published for the National Council for One Parent Families with a foreword by J. K. Rowlings, it tries to encompass both magis and children/ one parent families. The editors have been unable to decide whether the theme of the anthology should be magic or one parent families. Consequently the collection lack coherency and stories that might stand well on their own becom minor irritations because they don't belong.A few of the stories stand out, but many are mediocre, and has little todo with the themes of the anthology. The introductory story by Sue Townsend sets the tone by being neither one thing not the other, It is a very weak story whose relevancy for this particular show more anthology is non-existing, as is O'Farrells and Roberts.
The most outstanding story in the collection - which deals both with being part of a single parent family from the point of view of the child, is a magical story and is told in a lyrical magical language - is by Meera Syal; Now You See Her, Now You Don't. But also My Daughter, the Fox and The Fortune-Teller are able to combine th etwo themes in stories that are both relevant and touching in their depiction of respectively a mother having given birth to a fox, and having to let her go as she grows up - poignant and emotional - and the birthday celebration effords of single mothers - wry and funny.
Anyone looking for an anthology of magical stories with children would do better to look for The Fairy Reel and The Green Man edited by Terri Windling.
This collection has totally discouraged me from reading anything by Emma Donaghue (whose books I've been meainig to read) and made sure that I would pick up something by Meera Syal. show less
The most outstanding story in the collection - which deals both with being part of a single parent family from the point of view of the child, is a magical story and is told in a lyrical magical language - is by Meera Syal; Now You See Her, Now You Don't. But also My Daughter, the Fox and The Fortune-Teller are able to combine th etwo themes in stories that are both relevant and touching in their depiction of respectively a mother having given birth to a fox, and having to let her go as she grows up - poignant and emotional - and the birthday celebration effords of single mothers - wry and funny.
Anyone looking for an anthology of magical stories with children would do better to look for The Fairy Reel and The Green Man edited by Terri Windling.
This collection has totally discouraged me from reading anything by Emma Donaghue (whose books I've been meainig to read) and made sure that I would pick up something by Meera Syal. show less
Not nearly as good as I was led to believe by the title and premise, I'm afraid. I found the stories all fairly standard and not particularly magical. Stopped reading fairly fast. I'll be passing this on and reading something better.
Ratings
Members
- Recently Added By
Author Information
All Editions
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 65
- Popularity
- 478,518
- Reviews
- 2
- Rating
- (2.67)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper
- ISBNs
- 1
























































