Mention Books Supposing Journey to the River Sea
Original Title: | Journey to the River Sea |
ISBN: | 0142501840 (ISBN13: 9780142501849) |
Edition Language: | English |
Setting: | Amazon Rainforest |
Literary Awards: | Nestlé Smarties Book Prize for 9–11 years (2001), Rebecca Caudill Young Readers' Book Award Nominee (2006) |
Eva Ibbotson
Paperback | Pages: 304 pages Rating: 4.18 | 11785 Users | 846 Reviews

Present Appertaining To Books Journey to the River Sea
Title | : | Journey to the River Sea |
Author | : | Eva Ibbotson |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | Deluxe Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 304 pages |
Published | : | October 13th 2003 by Puffin Books (first published May 4th 2001) |
Categories | : | Historical. Historical Fiction. Adventure. Young Adult. Childrens. Fiction |
Relation To Books Journey to the River Sea
Sent in 1910 to live with distant relatives who own a rubber plantation along the Amazon River, English orphan Maia is excited. She believes she is in for brightly colored macaws, enormous butterflies, and "curtains of sweetly scented orchids trailing from the trees." Her British classmates warn her of man-eating alligators and wild, murderous Indians. Unfortunately, no one cautions Maia about her nasty, xenophobic cousins, who douse the house in bug spray and forbid her from venturing beyond their coiffed compound. Maia, however, is resourceful enough to find herself smack in the middle of more excitement than she ever imagined, from a mysterious "Indian" with an inheritance, to an itinerant actor dreading his impending adolescence, to a remarkable journey down the Amazon in search of the legendary giant sloth.Rating Appertaining To Books Journey to the River Sea
Ratings: 4.18 From 11785 Users | 846 ReviewsAssessment Appertaining To Books Journey to the River Sea
A wonderful adventure story set in England and the Amazon. Richly drawn characters and beautifully written. I felt like I was there! Perfect for UKS2 - I'll be sharing this at school.A very fun read. Eva Ibbotson has become one of my favorite writers recently. She's a British author who was born in Vienna and emigrated to England as a child in the early 30s. I raced through her adult historical fiction/romances (which are currently being re-released as YA) and enjoyed all of them, even though I was familiar her plot pattern by the third book.This is the second children's/YA book of hers that I've read. (The first was The Star of Kazan, which I also liked a lot.) Following
I've been thinking a lot about how children's fiction can play a role in the moral development of a child. Ibbotson writes in a variety of genres, but even her most humorous and farcical stories always have a particular moral clarity about them. She reminds me of Dahl in that way. The baddies are lazy, selfish, greedy, grasping -- and usually rich. The goodies are kind, honest, brave, resourceful, modest and hardworking. They yearn for connectedness, not things.Like many of Ibbotson's

Maia is an orphan who has been taught in an all girls boarding school in England for most of her life. This existence could not be more different from Brazil where her aunt and uncle live with their twin girls and where she will shortly be shipped off her with her stern governess. Although her classmates warn of the perils of the Amazon, Maia is excited by the prospect of her new adventure. However, what she finds waiting for her is not at all what she had imagined. Her aunt and uncle have only
I think this book was really good because the story flowed really well and it made me want to keep reading, I think Maia is very brave and confident when she was going to live with a new family she was always stating the positive.
I enjoyed this through and through, and somewhere in the second half it sailed from a 3-star rating to a 4-star one. I think its because, by the mid-point, almost all the events that an adult reader would predict have happened, and from then on its all about seeing how everything plays out and, most important, seeing Maia in her element:There were girls at school who wanted to ride, and others who wanted to go on the stage, and there was a girl who had made a terrible fuss till she was allowed
Eva Ibbotson, if still with us, would have been celebrating her 90th birthday in January 2015, but sadly she died in 2010. Born in Vienna, she had to move to England in 1935 when Hitler came to power. That experience -- of being uprooted -- was drawn on directly for novels like The Morning Gift (about a girl from a secular Jewish family escaping Nazi Germany) and indirectly, I suspect, for Maia, the young protagonist of Journey to the River Sea. Who has not imagined what life might be like if
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