The grey king
In the 4th volume of The dark is rising sequence, Will Stanton, visiting in Wales, is swept into a desperate quest to find the golden harp and to awaken the ancient Sleepers.
Available Copies by Location
Location | |
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Community Centre | Available |
Browse Related Items
Subject |
Wales > Juvenile fiction. |
Genre |
Fantasy fiction. Fiction. |
- ISBN: 0689829841
- ISBN: 9780689829840
- ISBN: 1416949674
- ISBN: 9781416549671
- Physical Description 165 pages.
- Publisher New York : Simon & Schuster Children's Pub., 1999.
- Copyright ©1975
Content descriptions
General Note: | "Aladdin Newbery." |
Target Audience Note: | Ages 10 up. |
Immediate Source of Acquisition Note: | LSC 7.99 |
Series
Additional Information
Kirkus Review
The Grey King
Kirkus Reviews
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Will Stanton, youngest of the Old Ones, goes to visit his Welsh relatives to recover from a serious illness and complete the first quest he has undertaken on his own. Aided only by the mysterious albino boy, Bran, and his gray-eyed dog, Cafall, Will must find the magic golden harp and use it to defeat the Grey King of the mountain and awaken The Sleepers, who will be powerful allies of the Light in its final stand. Strangely enough it is the very real peril of two dogs--Cafall and Pen, who become pawns of the Grey King and are accused of sheep killing by the villainous farmer Caradog Prichard--which occasions most of the suspense. In the whole epic tug of war between Good and Evil, Cafall's death is the first loss worth tears and it makes us care deeply about his loyal, grieving owner, Bran. . . who turns out to be the son of Guinevere and King Arthur, but that's another matter. The Welsh-accented spells, the gray, spirit foxes who come out of the hills to prey, the climactic battle of enchantments between the swans and cormorants commanded by Will and the seething fish controlled by the Grey King must stir even the most sluggish imagination. Yet Will's special status as an Old One--his ability to summon a new, previously unheard of spell or power at each crisis--tends to lull the reader into passivity; there's something alienating about not knowing the rules ahead of time. Although the imagery here is somewhat more familiar and less eerie, this is every bit as grandly orchestrated as Green-witch (1974). Cooper is clearly building towards a thumping conclusion in the fifth and next volume and even those of us who have doubts about the significance of all this thunderous moral absolutism will want to get in on the action. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
School Library Journal Review
The Grey King
School Library Journal
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Gr 5-9-In Cooper's sweeping epic of the struggle between forces of good and evil, the background of Arthurian legend is prominent. When the Dark comes rising, Will Stanton, the youngest of the Old Ones, is guided in his quest to save the world by his mentor Merriman (Merlin), who also involves the three Drew siblings and a strange Welsh boy, Bran. © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.