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Other editions of book Witch Child

  • Witch Child

    Celia Rees, Jennifer Ehle, Listening Library

    Audiobook (Listening Library, April 14, 2009)
    Enter the world of young Mary Newbury, a world where simply being different can cost a person her life. Hidden until now in the pages of her diary, Mary's startling story begins in 1659, the year her beloved grandmother is hanged in the public square as a witch. Mary narrowly escapes a similar fate, only to face intolerance and new danger among the Puritans in the New World. How long can she hide her true identity? Will she ever find a place where her healing powers will not be feared?
  • Witch Child

    Celia Rees

    eBook (Bloomsbury Children's Books, May 3, 2010)
    When Mary sees her grandmother accused of witchcraft and hanged for the crime, she is silently hurried to safety by an unknown woman. The woman gives her tools to keep the record of her days - paper and ink. Mary is taken to a boat in Plymouth and from there sails to the New World where she hopes to make a new life among the pilgrims. But old superstitions die hard and soon Mary finds that she, like her grandmother, is the victim of ignorance and stupidity, and once more she faces important choices to ensure her survival. With a vividly evoked environment and characters skilfully and patiently drawn, this is a powerful literary achievement by Celia Rees that is utterly engrossing from start to finish.
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  • Witch Child

    Celia Rees

    Paperback (Candlewick, May 12, 2009)
    "With its theme of religious intolerance and its touches of the supernatural, this is sure to be in high demand for a long time." — Kirkus ReviewsWelcome to the world of young Mary Newbury, a world where simply being different can cost a person her life. Hidden until now in the pages of her diary, Mary’s startling story begins in 1659, the year her beloved grandmother is hanged in the public square as a witch. Mary narrowly escapes a similar fate, only to face intolerance and new danger among the Puritans in the New World. How long can she hide her true identity? Will she ever find a place where her healing powers will not be feared?
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  • Witch Child

    Celia Rees

    Library Binding (Turtleback Books, May 12, 2009)
    FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. After Mary's beloved grandmother is hanged as a witch in Salem, Massachusetts in 1659, the relentless crowd turns on Mary.
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  • Witch Child

    Celia Rees

    Paperback (Candlewick, April 1, 2002)
    The spellbinding diary of a teenage girl who escapes persecution as a witch—only to face new intolerance in a Puritan settlement.Enter the world of young Mary Newbury, a world where simply being different can cost a person her life. Hidden until now in the pages of her diary, Mary’s startling story begins in 1659, the year her beloved grandmother is hanged in the public square as a witch. Mary narrowly escapes a similar fate, only to face intolerance and new danger among the Puritans in the New World. How long can she hide her true identity? Will she ever find a place where her healing powers will not be feared?Just two weeks after publication, Celia Rees’s WITCH CHILD spirited its way onto the Book Sense Children’s Only 76 list as one of the Top 10 books that independent booksellers like to handsell. Within a month, this riveting book sold out its first two hardcover printings. Now, Candlewick Press is pleased to announce the publication of WITCH CHILD in paperback.
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  • Witch Child

    Celia Rees

    Library Binding (Candlewick, July 13, 2001)
    This spellbinding story will transport readers to a time long ago, but one that might not be so different from the world today. (ages 12 and up)"First they 'walked ' her, marching her up and down, up and down between them for a day and a night until she could no longer hobble, her feet all bloody and swollen. She would not confess. So they set about to prove she was a witch. . . ." Enter the world of young Mary Newbury, a world where simply being different can cost a person her life. Hidden until now in the pages of her diary, Mary's startling story begins in 1659, the year her beloved grandmother is hanged in the public square as a witch. Mary narrowly escapes a similar fate, only to face intolerance and new danger among the Puritans in the New World. How long can she hide her true identity? Will she ever find a place where her healing powers will not be feared? Though Mary's story takes place 350 years ago, she is a credible and engaging feminist character for modern times. WITCH CHILD will compel readers to ask themselves: how much have things really changed?
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  • Witch Child

    Celia Rees

    Hardcover (Candlewick Pr, Aug. 16, 2001)
    From the author's website: 1659. A time of fear and persecution. Mary, granddaughter of a witch, keeps a diary. It begins: I am Mary. I am a witch… She sees her grandmother hanged, is rescued by a stranger, takes ship for America and finds a place in a Puritan community there. All that befalls her, she records in her diary and as she writes, she stitches the pages inside a quilt for discovery would mean death. The quilt lies undisturbed for more than three hundred years. Then, during the process of conservation, the diary is discovered. Her story can be told.
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  • Witch Child

    Celia Rees, Jennifer Ehle

    Audio Cassette (Listening Library, July 10, 2001)
    Read by Jennifer EhleApprox. 6.5 hours4 cassettesMary's grandmother is executed for witchcraft, and Mary is forced to leave her home to avoid the same fate. At first she flees to the English countryside, but when the atmosphere of superstition and suspicion becomes all consuming she leaves on a boat for America in the hope that she can start over and forget her past. But during the journey, she realizes that the past is not so easy to escape.
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  • Witch Child

    Celia Rees

    Audio CD (Listening Library, Aug. 16, 2002)
    None
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  • Witch Child

    Celia Rees

    Paperback (Candlewick, May 12, 2009)
    "With its theme of religious intolerance and its touches of the supernatural, this is sure to be in high demand for a long time." — Kirkus ReviewsWelcome to the world of young Mary Newbury, a world where simply being different can cost a person her life. Hidden until now in the pages of her diary, Mary’s startling story begins in 1659, the year herbeloved grandmother is hanged in the public square as a witch. Mary narrowly escapes a similar fate, only to face intolerance and new danger among the Puritans in the New World. How long can she hide her true identity? Will she ever find a place where her healing powers will not be feared?
    Z
  • Witch Child

    Celia Rees

    Paperback (Bloomsbury Publishing PLC, July 6, 2009)
    When Mary sees her grandmother accused of witchcraft and hanged for the crime, she is silently hurried to safety by an unknown woman. The woman gives her tools to keep the record of her days - paper and ink. Mary is taken to a boat in Plymouth and from there sails to the New World where she hopes to make a new life among the pilgrims. But old superstitions die hard and soon Mary finds that she, like her grandmother, is the victim of ignorance and stupidity, and once more she faces important choices to ensure her survival. With a vividly evoked environment and characters skilfully and patiently drawn, this is a powerful literary achievement by Celia Rees that is utterly engrossing from start to finish.
    Z
  • Witch Child

    Celia Rees

    Paperback (Bloomsbury Pub Ltd, June 16, 2001)
    None
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