Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L'Engle

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(Paperback - Reprint)

  • Publisher: Square Fish
  • Pub. Date: May 2007
  • ISBN-13: 9780312367541
  • Sales Rank: 1,147
  • Age Range: 12 and up
  • 224pp
  • Series: Time Quartet Series, #1
  • Edition Description: Reprint
 
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Synopsis

This newly re-designed edition includes Madeleine L'Engle's Newbery Medal acceptance speech and a new interview with the author.

Annotation

Meg Murry and her friends become involved with unearthly strangers and a search for Meg's father, who disappeared while engaged in secret work for the government.

Barbara L. Talcroft - Children's Literature

Winner of the Newbery Medal in 1963, L'Engle's work of fantasy and science fiction combined with some Christian theology has now been read by several generations of young enthusiasts. The author went on to write three others, forming a quartet based on the Murry family, and including themes like the power of love and the need to make responsible moral choices. In this story, Meg Murry, her extraordinary little brother Charles Wallace, and schoolmate Calvin O'Keefe make the acquaintance of eccentric Mrs. Whatsit and friends (who turn out to be extraterrestrial beings). Together they journey through a wrinkle in time, a tesseract, to rescue the Murrys' missing father from an evil presence (likened by some interpreters to a black hole), and a sinister brain called IT. Although this is fantasy, the characters are portrayed realistically and sympathetically; it is Meg's ability to love that enables them to return safely to Earth and make secure the right to individuality. L'Engle herself claims that she does not know how she came to write the story; "I had no choice," she says, "It was only after it was written that I realized what some of it meant." A plus with this new edition is an essay by Lisa Sonne that explores scientific concepts related to the story—multiple dimensions, dark energy, and string theory. Each of these concepts were conceived since the book's 1962 publication but are amazingly applicable to A Wrinkle in Time, and help to ensure that this imaginative book will be read for a long time into the future. 2005 (orig. 1962), Laurel Leaf/Random House, Ages 9 up.

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Biography

Best known as the writer of YA classics like A Wrinkle in Time, the prolific and eclectic Madeleine L'Engle penned adult fiction, poems, plays, memoirs, and religious meditations -- all infused with her trademark eloquence, imagination, and intellectual curiosity.

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Customer Reviews

Wrinkle in Timeby Anonymous

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September 26, 2008: Madeline L'Engle is a real sci-fi author. She doesn't write about magic and imaginary ideas and stuff, she writes about things that could truly exist with scientific principles. This book can get confusing at times and it's a little bit weird but it's real sci-fi. I also REALLY respect her for being able to write sci-fi AND mention Jesus, God and Christianity. High Five Madeline!

A Wrinkle in Timeby Anonymous

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September 23, 2008: It is a very wierd and odd book. None of it made sence,and the chapters are long and confusing.If you like boring books go ahead buy it.


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