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The same day that the villagers of Thornstowe finally hunt down a witch with a reputation for stealing children, a 12-year-old appears in the woods with no memory of her past. Is there a connection between Isabelle, the girl who doesn’t know who she is, and the girl the witch stole six years earlier? One of the few things Isabelle remembers is a chant that keeps running through her head:
Old as dirt,
dirty as dirt.
Ugly as sin,
mean as sin.
Don’t let the old witch catch you!
Could Isabelle have been stolen by the old witch of the woods, or has she lost her memory as the result of an accident? And what about the baby the witch stole right before the villagers attacked? Did either the witch or the baby survive the fire the villagers set?
Isabelle is born twelve years old and running. Running through a forest. From what? A pack of hunting dogs. Treed and injured by the dogs, Isabelle must confront her amnesia. Was she stolen by a witch at birth as the bigoted little village she finds herself within believes? Why does she feel uncomfortable with the family who welcomes her as their long-lost daughter? Why can she not get that old taunt, "Ugly as sin . . . Don't let the old witch catch you!" out of her mind? Watching the situation unfold through Isabelle's fragmentary stream-of-consciousness point of view, one cannot help but root for the defenseless heroine as she tries to work out her past and save her future. Vivian Vande Velde is very good, indeed, at her favorite genre, creating a tight little horror story that opens and builds with Isabelle's bits and pieces of returning memory. The book is a fast, easy, and suspenseful read that should tempt kids to upgrade from R. L. Stein. Reviewer: Kathleen Karr
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10/27/2009: I thoroughly enjoyed this book. I read it in one day. The story reminded me of a fairy tale about the "ugly witch". My eleven year old daughter also read this book and she enjoyed it as well. We will definitely be going back to get more books by this author.
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04/26/2009: This is the first book of Velde's I have read and I found myself enjoying the story line. Isabelle is a young girl who has no memory of who she is. The story begins with Isabelle running in the forest with a pack of hunting dogs tight on her heels. Just when she thinks the dogs will be the death of her, she pulled into unconsciousness. Then she awakens she finds she has been taken in by a peasant family - Avis and Browley - and their young daughter, Ravyn.
Ravyn is a six year old who is determined Isabelle was a Princess stolen away by the legendary witch from the forest. Apparently this witch has been stealing away young children for many years - the children are never seen or heard from again. Ravyn enjoys weaving a new life for Isabelle out of her curious imagination.Just when Isabelle is starting to feel comfortable with the peasant family, another family appears, claiming she is their daughter who was stolen away six years earlier. This poor family had recently has a second child stolen away, a newborn only one months old. The mother is determined that the young girl is her daughter, Isabelle, but the oldest daughter, Honey, is convinced this girl is not her long lost sister.But all is not what it seems with Isabelle's "supposed" family and she begins to wonder if they are claiming her in order to gain an inheritance from a rich aunt, whom Isabelle is named after.This book has a happy ending, but not the ending I was anticipating. Just when I thought I knew how the story would end, Velde gives the story an unusual twist.This small book - 158 pages - was a different kind of young adult book and I read it in one sitting. Not your normal young adult fantasy book, this story is more along the lines of the wonderful fairy tales I read as a child. Stolen has increased my desire to read other books by Vivian Vande Velde.