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The Girl and the Witch's Garden

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"As enchanting as it is wise, the true magic of this secret garden story is in its unflinching, heart-wrenching exploration of grief, belonging, and inner strength. Once I stepped into the witch's garden with Piper, I did not want to leave." —Jessica Khoury, author of The Mystwick School of Musicraft
"Piper Peavey is a protagonist all her own in a spellbinding story that has a touch of Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children and a dab of Circus Mirandus." —Quinn Sosna-Spear, author of The Remarkable Inventions of Walter Mortinson
"Magical and mysterious, a captivating read from start to beautiful end." —Megan Frazer Blakemore, author of The Water Castle and The Story Web

The Secret Garden meets Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children in this rich, charming middle grade adventure about a girl determined to infiltrate her grandmother's enchanted garden with the help of some magically gifted friends.
Mallory Estate is the last place twelve-year-old Piper Peavey wants to spend her summer vacation. The grounds are always cold, the garden out back is dead, a mysterious group of children call the property home, and there's a rumor that Melena M. Mallory—the owner of the estate and Piper's wealthy grandmother—is a witch.

But when Piper's father falls ill, Mallory Estate is exactly where she finds herself.

The grand house and its garden hold many secrets—some of which may even save her father—and Piper will need to believe in herself, her new friends, and magic if she wants to unlock them before it's too late.
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    • Kirkus

      March 1, 2020
      Magical powers, family secrets, and a mysterious garden hiding a potion for immortality fill the pages. Add in a stalking Persian cat. With her father undergoing chemo, 12-year-old Piper Peavey is sent to live with her estranged mother and maternal grandmother on their estate in Connecticut. Only this is no ordinary estate; it is "dying," and stories about it are "fascinating and terrifying [to] schoolchildren in the same breath." It is said to be inhabited by a witch--her grandmother--with a white cat. For Piper, circumstances make it a bittersweet stay. Piper, who, like her family, is white, is astonished to find that there are also four foster children living there: "bronze"-skinned Julius Gump, presumably Japanese American Kenji Naoki, and brown-skinned Camilla Cortez. The fourth kid, another boy, is missing. What connects these children is the possession of an "affinity," or special ability. And everyone wants to enter the mysterious garden on the estate, but the "High Order of Magi" has magically restricted access to its hidden treasure. And no wonder--it is an "elixir of immortality." It all has a familiar feel, and what follows is a quick-paced but unremarkable tale of working out clues, Piper's growing ability to use her newfound affinity, and her obsession with obtaining the elixir for her dying father. Bowman ties up the family drama while leaving room for further adventures. An unsatisfying remix. (Fantasy. 9-12)

      COPYRIGHT(2020) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • School Library Journal

      April 1, 2020

      Gr 5-8-Twelve-year-old Piper Peavey lives with her father Atticus in Connecticut. As her father faces terminal cancer, Piper is dumped at the Mallory Estate, owned by her estranged mother Sophia and grandmother Melena. Steeped in magical rumors, Mallory Estate is also home to foster children Julius, Kenji, Teddy, and Camilla, who possess magical gifts. Under Sophia's instruction, they work to locate the estate's enchanted garden where the elixir of life is hidden. Desperate to save Atticus, Piper develops her own ability and reaches the garden first, teaming up with Teddy to solve three magical riddles. The children, Sophia, and Melena each are motivated by different goals, and Piper's family secrets guide the final outcome. Bowman's third-person limited perspective gives readers a close understanding of Piper's emotions as she faces her mother's desertion and her father's prognosis. The writing is smooth, and Piper's dialogue with the children and her mother purposefully advances the plot. As with any Faustean bargain, Piper's desire to have the elixir at any cost creates an uncomfortable tension that electrifies the story. The world-building, however, has a tenuous quality. At times, Bowman has to inform readers how Piper figures something out or what the magical rules are. Her explanations seem more the writer's construct than a tight-knit magical universe. VERDICT An intriguing premise whose execution is acceptable though not outstanding, saved by Piper's honest grief. Purchase where interest indicates.-Caitlin Augusta, Stratford Library Association, CT

      Copyright 2020 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      April 1, 2020
      Grades 4-6 While her father undergoes chemo, 12-year-old Piper must stay at Mallory Estate, where her estranged mother and aloof grandmother live. Piper is surprised to meet the mansion's other residents, foster kids Julius, Camilla, and Kenji, and learn their secret: chosen for their affinities, magical abilities such as shape-shifting and teleportation, they have been recruited to search for the elixir of immortality, supposedly hidden on the estate. After Julius enlists her help in finding Teddy, a foster child who went missing while seeking the elixir, Piper discovers and develops her own magical affinity. Bowman creates an adventure story featuring a plucky heroine who shoulders heavy emotional burdens while facing an ethical dilemma: if she recovers the elixir, will she use it to help the foster kids or to save her father's life? The book's strength is its grounding in reality, both in its modern-day setting and in its limitation of magic as a problem-solver. Though unmasked in the end, the story's villain remains unvanquished, leaving the door open for sequels.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2020, American Library Association.)

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Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:5.5
  • Lexile® Measure:740
  • Interest Level:4-8(MG)
  • Text Difficulty:3-4

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