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Kevin Crossley-Holland

1941-
Reviewed by
Rebecca Fisher
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Kevin Crossley-Holland
Kevin Crossley-Holland
re-writes legends for children. Learn more at his website.







Click covers to view available formats, including audio & Kindle.

The Arthur Trilogy — (2000-2003) Ages 9-12. Publisher: The year is 1199, and on the borders of England and Wales young Arthur de Caldicot waits impatiently to grow up and become a knight. One day his father's friend Merlin gives Arthur a shining black stone, and he starts to see stories of his namesake, King Arthur. As the stories of the two Arthurs intertwine, the narrative builds to a thrilling and mysterious climax.

Kevin Crossley-Holland The Arthur Trilogy: 1. The Seeing Stone 2. At the Crossing Places 3. King of the Middle MarchKevin Crossley-Holland The Arthur Trilogy: 1. The Seeing Stone 2. At the Crossing Places 3. King of the Middle MarchKevin Crossley-Holland The Arthur Trilogy: 1. The Seeing Stone 2. At the Crossing Places 3. King of the Middle March
Available for download at Audible.com

Related:
Gatty's Tale
— (2006) Publisher: Of all the characters in The Seeing Stone and At the Crossing-Places, it is Gatty the village girl — steadfast, forthright, innocent and wise — who has won the hearts of readers. This is her story, written down at her behest by her childhood friend and hero, Arthur de Caldicot. Gatty's dream is to follow Arthur to Jerusalem — though she has not even understood that Jerusalem is farther away than Ludlow, and across the sea. As he sets out on the crusade, Gatty, unknown to him, follows. Her Kevin Crossley-Holland Gatty's Tale extraordinary journey on foot across Europe and towards the east makes a marvellous medieval adventure story. Separate from the Arthur trilogy, this ambitious novel picks up many of its strands and characters but leaves fantasy behind to create a magnificently vivid and realistic picture of life and times in the Europe of 1202.   Available for download at Audible.com


Kevin Crossley-Holland Gatty's TaleGatty's Tale: "I Seen Despair and I Know What Hope Buys..."

I picked up this book from the library on an impulse: my current topic of interest is the Crusades, and Gatty's Tale, looked as though it would satisfy this itch. Chronicling the journey of a young girl who undertakes a pilgrimage, Kevin Crossley-Holland takes his spunky little protagonist on a fascinating journey from Wales to Jerusalem, as well as from girlhood to womanhood.

The year is 1203, and Gatty is a fifteen year old field-girl employed by Lady Gwyneth de Ewloe as a chamber-servant to accompany her on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land. Lady Gwyneth wants to travel to Jerusalem to obtain forgiveness from some as-yet unknown sin, and has gathered together nine pilgrims to make the journey with her across Europe to the heart of the world.

The pilgrims are an assorted lot: a husband and wife, a music teacher, a lady-in-waiting, a priest, a cook... all of them make up an extended family as they brave the perils of the journey over mountain and across desert, and we are with them as they squabble, pray, suffer, tell stories, joke and grieve their way across Europe in a fellowship that is not unlike those of "The Canterbury Tales." As they say, it is the journey and not the destination that is important, and not one of our pilgrims, least of all Gatty herself, is left unchanged by the experiences and trials they go through.

Although I'm no expert on the subject, the book seems to be meticulously researched, and Crossley-Holland has a gift of making medieval life seem real and immediate. One of the greatest challenges of writing historical-fiction is to not only make the past come to life, but to write in a way in which the differences between then and now are integrated into the story itself, and not presented to the reader as story-halting info-dumps. Holland expertly weaves the day-to-day life of the pilgrims into the narrative without alienating or confusing the reader.

Gatty makes for a lovely young heroine. Although only a field-girl, she is impulsive, bright, compassionate, and possesses an innate sense of wisdom and openness to the world around her that makes for several thought-provoking moments. She compares her journey to a story that contains several forever-unknown stories within it, referring to the people she meets or sees on her way, and on returning from her great pilgrimage and attempting to share her experiences with a friend, she realizes that "no one is really quite as interested in us as we are in ourselves."

Crossley-Holland also gifts Gatty with a beautiful singing voice that grows and develops at the same rate that she does, and has a solid grasp on her speech patterns that provide much of the charm of this book. All of it serves to make Gatty a living, breathing young woman and one of the most vivid characters I've come across in a long time.

However, not all of Gatty's companions make it to the Holy Land; in fact most are abruptly dropped from the narrative, not from death, but other extenuating circumstances. Sadly, once they are gone we never meet up with (most of) them again. Perhaps this adds to the realism of the book, in that we lose some people along the way, but from a storytelling perspective, it feels as though Crossley-Holland simply got tired of them and wrote them out of the story. But by this stage, I had grown quite attached to some of the pilgrims, and was disappointed that we never got to see them again (and only discover their fates from a third-hand account).

It also became apparent to me early on that Gatty's Tale was in fact a "spin-off" of sorts from Crossley-Holland’s award-winning Arthur trilogy, which I have yet to read. Although I immensely enjoyed Gatty's Tale, I'm sure that it would have carried more meaning and resonance for me if I had read the previous trilogy, in which Gatty's life, friendships, and personality were established. Though I highly recommend Gatty's Tale I'd first recommend tracking down The Seeing Stone and its sequels in order to get a firmer grasp on Gatty's history and what she means to the author. —Rebecca Fisher

Stand-alone novels:


Havelok the Dane
(1964) Publisher: The legend of Havelok the Dane derives from events of the Viking period. It ells the story of how the young prince Havelok escapes from the clutches of his wicked guardian, assisted by Grim, a jovial fisherman, and lands on the desolate Lincolnshire coast at the place now known as Grimsby.


King Horn: A Medieval Romance — (1973) Ages 9-12. A retellings of the medieval romance King Horn.


Beowulf — (1982) Ages 9-12. Publisher: This is the story of a young man who travelled far across the sea to fight two terrifying monsters-one who could rip a man apart and drink his blood, the other who lived like a sea-wolf at the bottom of a dark, blood-stained lake. His name was Beowulf, and his story was written down in Anglo-Saxon in the eighth century. Kevin Crossley-Holland retells the story for children in strong, rhythmical prose, with striking illustrations by Charles Keeping.


Storm — (1985) Ages 9-12. Publisher: Annie loves everything about the marsh near her home, except for the stories of a ghost who roams there, and then one stormy night she faces her fear, when she must travel through the marsh to fetch the doctor to help deliver her sister's baby.


The Quest for Olwen — (1988) Ages 9-12. With Gwyn Thomas


The Tale of Taliesin (1992) Ages 9-12. With Gwyn Thomas




Outsiders
— (2007) Ages 9-12. Publisher: Six strange and haunting stories, set in isolated communities inland and by the sea, where insiders stick together, and outsiders — a girl outlawed for her illegitimate child, a wild man who walks out of the sea — are regarded with suspicion. Kevin Crossley-Holland has a genius for reinventing folk tales in a way that makes the characters real people, whose thoughts and feelings are our own. This little collection brings together some of his finest and most admired retellings, including the three best-known of all, 'The Green Children', 'Sea-Tongue' and 'The Wild Man'. Linked by ideas about exile and displacement, they make a thought-provoking book for our times, beautifully presented with line drawings by a notable artist.


Crossing to Paradise — (2008) Young adult. Publisher: Gatty is a field girl on a manor. She has never seen busy London or the bright Channel, the snowy Alps of France or the boats in the Venetian sea. She has not sung in the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem or prayed at the manger in Bethlehem — or been kidnapped, or abandoned, or kissed, or heartbroken. But all these things will change. As Gatty journeys with Lady Gwyneth and a prickly new family of pilgrims across Europe to the Holy Land, Kevin Crossley-Holland reveals a medieval world as rich and compelling as the world of today it foresees — and, in Gatty, a character readers will never forget.


Kevin Crossley-Holland Waterslain AngelsWaterslain Angels — (2008) Publisher: In the village of Waterslain in Norfolk, in the 1950s, a fragment from a carved angel's wing is discovered. Maybe the wooden angels that once supported the church roof were not, after all, destroyed centuries ago, but spirited away to safety. Two children decide to find them. There are few clues, but a strange inscription on the church wall leads them into terrifying places - up to the top of the church tower, down a tunnel where they are nearly drowned. Annie dreams of the man who was sent in by Cromwell to smash up the church, and of angels flying and falling. For Sandy, whose father, an American airman, was recently killed, the angels bring comfort. The whereabouts of the angels becomes clear to them - but then they discover that other people are hunting for them, and are determined to stop the children at all costs. The friendship between the boy adjusting to a new life in his mother's village, and the girl whose family have always lived on their remote farm, the haunting atmosphere of the Norfolk saltmarshes, and the strong sense of the past still present, give richness to a tense and fast-paced story of detection for younger readers.


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