Seacrow Island

Author: Astrid Lindgren

Stock information

General Fields

  • : 40.00 NZD
  • : 9781590178683
  • : New York Review of Books, Incorporated, The
  • : New York Review of Books
  • :
  • : 0.567
  • : 26 May 2015
  • : .8 Inches X 5.7 Inches X 8.8 Inches
  • : United States
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  • :
  • :
  • : books

Special Fields

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  • :
  • : Astrid Lindgren
  • :
  • : Hardback
  • :
  • :
  • : English
  • : [Fic]
  • : 256
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Barcode 9781590178683
9781590178683

Description

Tiny Seacrow Island is one of hundreds of islands in the sparkling blue of the Baltic Sea. Though small, it has everything you'd want in an island: woods to wander in, flowers to pick, fish to catch, boats to sail in, all kinds of animals. But it doesn't have very many young people. So when the four Melkerson kids and their father move into Carpenter's Cottage one June day, they're immediately welcomed by the resourceful islanders: Johan and Niklas Melkerson, at twelve and thirteen, are natural companions for adventurous Freddy and Teddy (girls exactly their age); dreamy Pelle, the baby of the family, gets up to trouble with bossy Tjorven and fanciful Stina; and ever-responsible Malin, who at nineteen looks after her scatterbrained father as well as her brothers, catches the eye of all the island's young men. Before long Seacrow Island and Carpenter's Cottage (tumbledown and leaky though it may be) have become a real home for the Melkersons. "Seacrow Island" is a remarkable story, filled with sweetness and sorrow, humor and suspense, and peopled with the vivid, unexpected, wonderfully winning characters we've come to expect from the creator of the unforgettable Pippi Longstocking.

Author description

Astrid Lindgren (1907-2002) was born in Vimmerby, Sweden, and grew up with three siblings on a family farm in the SmAland countryside, a setting that later formed the backdrop for many of her books. In 1926 she moved to Stockholm where she found work as a secretary. She did not begin writing until 1944 when, immobilized with a sprained ankle, she began to set down the Pippi Longstocking stories she had invented over the years to entertain her daughter, Karin. Her first book (Britt-Mari Opens Her Heart) was published by RabEn & SjOgren that same year, followed by "Pippi Longstocking" in 1945. Free-spirited and supernaturally strong in all respects, Pippi was an immediate favorite of Swedish schoolchildren, and her popularity only increased with the tales of her adventures that followed. In 1946, Lindgren became an editor and then the head of the children's book department at RabEn & SjOgren, a role she held for the next twenty-four years, living in Stockholm and spending summers on her beloved island of Furusund in the Stockholm archipelago, where "Seacrow Island" is set. After the Pippi series, Lindgren wrote many fairy tales and picture books, in addition to further chapter books, including "Mio, My Son" (1954; published by The New York Review Children's Collection) and "Ronia, the Robber's Daughter" (1981). In addition to writing more than forty children's books, Lindgren published and produced plays and screenplays, and was politically active and lobbied successfully for what became the Animal Protection Act of 1988. She received the Swedish Academy's Gold Medal in 1971 for her contribution to children's literature, and the Dag HammarskjOld Award (1984), Albert Schweitzer Medal (1989), and Right Livelihood Award (1994) for her humanitarian efforts. In 2003 the Swedish government created the Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award in her honor.