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Witch Week
The Chronicles of Chrestomanci, Book 3
by 
Diana Wynne Jones
Publisher: HarperCollins
Subject(s):  Fantasy
Fiction
Juvenile Fiction
Language(s):  English

Format Information

Adobe PDF eBook Request this eBook
Available copies:   0 (0 patron(s) on waiting list)
Library copies:   1
File size:   1191 KB
ISBN:   9780060511715
Release date:   Apr 02, 2002

Description

PerfectBound e-book exclusive extras: "Diana Wynne Jones's The Chronicles of Chrestomanci: Nine Notes"; and our exclusive interview with Diana Wynne Jones.



There are good witches and bad witches, but the law says that all witches must be burned at the stake. So when an anonymous note warns, "Someone in this class is a witch," the students in 6B are nervous -- especially the boy who's just discovered that he can cast spells and the girl who was named after the most famous witch of all.

Only Chrestomanci can sort out the trouble that lies ahead!

Diana Wynne Jones's beloved Chronicles of Chrestomanci include Charmed Life, The Magicians of Caprona, Witch Week, The Lives of Christopher Chant, and Mixed Magics -- all published by PerfectBound, all containing a rich section of e-book exclusive extras about the worlds of Chrestomanci.

If you like this title, you might also like…

Charmed Life
Charmed Life
Diana Wynne Jones

Excerpts

Chapter One

...

The note said: Someone in this class is a witch. It was written in capital letters in ordinary blue ballpoint, and it had appeared between two of the geography books Mr. Crossley was marking. Anyone could have written it. Mr. Crossley rubbed his ginger moustache unhappily. He looked out over the bowed heads of Class 6B and wondered what to do about it.

He decided not to take the note to the headmistress. It was possibly just a joke, and Miss Cadwallader had no sense of humor to speak of. The person to take it to was the deputy head, Mr. Wentworth. But the difficulty there was that Mr. Wentworth's son was a member of 6B -- the small boy near the back who looked younger than the rest was Brian Wentworth. No. Mr. Crossley decided to ask the writer of the note to own up. He would explain just what a serious accusation it was and leave the rest to the person's conscience.

Mr. Crossley cleared his throat to speak. Some of 6B looked up hopefully but Mr. Crossley had changed his mind then. It was journal time, and journal time was only to be interrupted for a serious emergency. Larwood House was very strict about that rule. Larwood House was very strict about a lot of things, because it was a boarding school run by the government for witch-orphans and children with other problems. The journals were to help the children with theirproblems. They were supposed to be strictly private. Every day, for half an hour, every pupil had to confide his or her private thoughts to their journals, and nothing else was done until everyone had. Mr. Crossley admired the idea heartily.

But the real reason that Mr. Crossley changed his mind was the awful thought that the note might be true. Someone in 6B could easily be a witch. Only Miss Cadwallader knew who exactly in 6B was a witch-orphan, but Mr. Crossley suspected that a lot of them were. Other classes had given Mr. Crossley feelings of pride and pleasure in being a schoolmaster; 6B never did. Only two of them gave him any pride at all: Theresa Mullett and Simon Silverson. They were both model pupils. The rest of the girls tailed dismally off until you came to empty chatterers like Estelle Green, or that dumpy girl, Nan Pilgrim, who was definitely the odd one out. The boys were divided into groups. Some had the sense to follow Simon Silverson's example, but quite as many clustered round that bad boy Dan Smith, and others again admired that tall Indian boy Nirupam Singh. Or they were loners like Brian Wentworth and that unpleasant boy Charles Morgan.

Here Mr. Crossley looked at Charles Morgan and Charles Morgan looked back, with one of the blank, nasty looks he was famous for. Charles wore glasses, which enlarged the nasty look and trained it on Mr. Crossley like a double laser beam. Mr. Crossley looked away hastily and went back to worrying about the note. Everyone in 6B gave up hoping for anything interesting to happen and went back to their journals.

28 October 1981, Theresa Mullett wrote in round, angelic writing. Mr. Crossley has found a note in our geography books. I thought it might be from Miss Hodge at first, because we all know Teddy is dying for love of her, but be looks so worried that I think it must be from some silly girl like Estelle Green. Nan Pilgrim couldn't get over the vaulting hone again today. She jumped and stuck halfway. It made us all laugh.

 

Reviews

Charmed Life... Times Literary Supplement ...
"An outstandingly inventive and entertaining novel."
 
Charmed Life... The Horn Book ...
"Set in a time vaguely reminiscent of Edwardian England, the novel presumes the existence of numerous worlds -- past, present, and future -- each with its own history. The concept is ingenious ... and shy small Cat, intimidated by his selfish sister, is a particularly appealing character."
 
The Magicians of Caprona... The Horn Book ...
"The author has a remarkable talent for creating a time which never was, yet which seem unbelievably familiar.... A gorgeous concoction of humor, suspense, and romance."
 
Witch Week... Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books ...
"This is a remarkably adroit blending of vivid fantasy, a funny and perceptive school story, and a thoughtful commentary on how thin the line that separates what is from what might be."
 
The Lives of Christopher Chant The Horn Book, starred review ...
"Wonderfully entertaining. A born storyteller weaves her own brand of magic.... Marvelously funny moments sparkle throughout."
 

About the Author

Diana Wynne Jones has been writing outstanding fantasy novels for more than twenty-five years and is one of the most distinguished writers in this field. She published her first Chrestomanci book, Charmed Life, in 1977.Her books -- among them, The Dalemark Quartet; A Tale of Time City; The Ogre Downstairs -- have earned a wide array of honors, including six ALA Notable Book awards and the British Fantasy Society’s Karl Edward Wagner Award for having made a significant impact on fantasy. Diana Wynne Jones lives in England.

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