The Dalemark Quartet, Volume 2: The Spellcoats and The Crown of Dalemark

Front Cover
Harper Collins, Apr 26, 2005 - Fiction - 784 pages

It is a country divided by war. For centuries, the earldoms of the North and South have battled. Now, four young people from different times -- with the help of their mysterious gods, the Undying -- must unite to save their beloved land.

When the great floods come to their village and Tanaqui and her family are driven out, they suspect the workings of the evil mage Kankredin. As Tanaqui tells the story of their journey, she begins to fit together clues that could halt his destruction and help her family fulfill their destiny.

Against his will, Mitt has been commanded to assassinate a young girl named Noreth, who travels to unite Dalemark. Joining the travelers, he meets the powerful musician Moril and discovers that Maewen, a girl from the future, has taken Noreth's place. Can they defeat Kankredin's ancient evil?

 

Contents

Section 1
5
Section 2
20
Section 3
36
Section 4
50
Section 5
67
Section 6
84
Section 7
100
Section 8
117
Section 18
287
Section 19
306
Section 20
325
Section 21
345
Section 22
356
Section 23
374
Section 24
390
Section 25
411

Section 9
133
Section 10
159
Section 11
177
Section 12
209
Section 13
224
Section 14
237
Section 15
253
Section 16
265
Section 17
278
Section 26
424
Section 27
616
Section 28
657
Section 29
683
Section 30
759
Section 31
774
Section 32
775
Section 33
777
Copyright

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About the author (2005)

Diana Wynne Jones was born in London on August 16, 1934. In 1953, she began school at St. Anne's College Oxford and attended lectures by J. R. R. Tolkien and C. S. Lewis. After graduation, she created plays for children that were performed at the London Arts Theatre. Her first book was published in 1973. She wrote over 40 books during her lifetime including Dark Lord of Derkholm, Earwig and the Witch, and the Chrestomanci series. She won numerous awards including the Guardian Award for Children's Books in 1977 for Charmed Life, the Boston Globe-Horn Book Award in 1984 for Archer's Goon, the Mythopeic Award in 1999, the Karl Edward Wagner Award in 1999, and the Life Achievement Award from the World Fantasy Organization in 2007. Her book Howl's Moving Castle was adapted into an animated film by director Hayao Miyazaki, and the film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Animated Feature. She died from lung cancer on March 26, 2011 at the age of 76.

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