In the Kingdom of the Fairies
A Memoir of a Magical Summer and a Remarkable Friendship
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- $11.99
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
When Susan Coyne was five years old her family went, as always, to spend the summer in a cottage on Lake of the Woods in Western Ontario. One of their neighbors was an elderly retired school administrator and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Moir, whose garden was one of the local wonders.
Nearby was a ruined cabin now inhabited, Susan was assured, by elves; all that remained of it was a moss-covered fireplace, a miniature enchanted castle with tunnels and ramparts. If you leaned in close you could hear the hum of elves living and working deep within. Susan swept the heart, filled walnut shells with water, and left a small tribute of flowers. One day when she visited the fireplace she found a letter waiting for her; it was from a princess fairy. and so began a summer's correspondence that would nourish a lifetime.
Susan later knew that the letters were written by Mr. Moir, with whom she stayed in touch over the years. But to her they always remained pure magic, a pathway into the worlds that words alone can create. Here is a memoir for children of all ages - to be read, read aloud, reread, remembered.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In this memoir of a childhood summer filled with magic, actress Coyne experiences seemingly real-life encounters with a fairy princess and comes to believe in a whole secret world of remarkable creatures. The June that she is five, Coyne accompanies her family to their summer cottage on Lake of the Woods in Canada, where their neighbors are the elderly Moir couple. Told by her father that an abandoned cottage had once been inhabited by elves, Coyne decides to beautify the cottage to encourage the little creatures to return."I went back to the fireplace and knelt down to look inside...I could almost hear the hum of busy elfish lives. So I started leaving little gifts there for the elves: handfuls of wild strawberries, a daisy chain." Days later, she finds the first of a series of letters addressed to her by the spunky Nootsie Tah, a fairy princess who shares the story of her enchanting life with the little girl. ("It irks me, Susan, it irks me to tears that whatever animal I try to be I turn out to be a cat. Saturday I turned into a Maltese kitten. I was beautiful," reads an early letter.) While not much of consequence transpires in the letters from Nootsie (which were penned by the kind Mr. Moir) or in the intervening pages, the young Coyne revels in her own extraordinary experiences and learns much about friendship, imagination and love. Coyne's memoir is a tribute to the beauty and innocence of childhood, where nothing is too strange or fantastic to come true. Heartwarming and charming, if a little treacly, this fiction-like reminiscence may delight children and adults alike.