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Sto caricando le informazioni... Parsley Sage, Rosemary, and Time (1975)di Jane Louise Curry
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Iscriviti per consentire a LibraryThing di scoprire se ti piacerà questo libro. Attualmente non vi sono conversazioni su questo libro. A much-beloved book from my childhood. Some of you who have read this might not know about its sequel, The Magical Cupboard (see my review). It's been such a long time since I've reread it, though, that I'll have to summarize the plot using the blurb from the inside cover of the 1975 Athenium first edition: Parsley Sage was an elderly cat. Rosemary was ten-year-old Rosemary Walpole. And the word "Time" that Rosemary discovered cut into a moss-covered stone in her aunt's old herb garden in Main should have been spelled "Thyme," because of the herb growing around it--or so Rosemary thought until she picked a sprig. Not only did it have a peculiar taste; it had a most astonishing power over Time itself. Everything but Rosemary was stopped motionless. flies hung in mid-flight, a measuring worm paused in mid-reach. Not a leaf rustled. Every time she touched the "thyme," time stopped! Rosemary, until then a rather unimaginative, proper little girl, was plunged into an extraordinary adventure in spite of herself. She was thrust back into the eighteenth century. Who would have thought that a cat could grow younger before it got older? Or that Rosemary would be accused as "an imp of the devil" and popped into jail, along with old Goody Cakebread who was suspected of witchcraft? And who could have guessed that the puzzle she met in eighteenth century Bennickport, Maine,would be solved by a funny old photograph? nessuna recensione | aggiungi una recensione
Ten-year-old Rosemary thinks the word "Time" cut into a stone in her aunt's old herb garden should be spelled "Thyme" until she picks a sprig of the herb around it and discovers herself back in the eighteenth century. Non sono state trovate descrizioni di biblioteche |
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I enjoyed it and am looking forward to the next installment, The Magical Cupboard. Some words are unique to the time it was written/for American audiences, but otherwise the author has a nice style of writing. It transports you into another world and there are some lovely black and white illustrations to accompany the text.
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