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Treasure of Green Knowe
Unavailable
Treasure of Green Knowe
Unavailable
Treasure of Green Knowe
Audiobook4 hours

Treasure of Green Knowe

Written by L.M. Boston

Narrated by Simon Vance

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

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Currently unavailable

Currently unavailable

About this audiobook

L. M. Boston's thrilling and chilling tales of Green Knowe, a haunted manor deep in an overgrown garden in the English countryside, have been entertaining readers for half a century. In this second book, Tolly returns for easter vacation to find that the portrait of Toby, Alexander and Linnet is missing--loaned out by his grandmother to a museum, possibly to be sold at the end of the exhibition because she needs money to mend the roof. Tolly is horrified, and then with the help of Susan and Jacob (Susan an ancestor of his from 1800) he learns about Green Knowe during their lifetime, and--yes--finds the treasure which was lost while they were living.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJan 1, 1986
ISBN9781593163372
Unavailable
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Reviews for Treasure of Green Knowe

Rating: 4.103658453658537 out of 5 stars
4/5

328 ratings22 reviews

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  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    The boy is on a visit at a family home. He has lots of adventures and run-ins with ghosts. Fun tale for kids.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This ghost story with a twist is about a child who goes to stay in an old, old house. There he meets the owner, an interesting old woman named Mrs Oldknowe, and three other children, a lot like him--except that they have been dead for years. In this ghost story, there are some frightening parts--in fact it has one of the scariest scenes I have ever read-- but it isn't the ghosts who are scary. All in all, however, the book is far more dreamy than spooky. And best of all, if you like it, it is only the first in a long series.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This book left me feeling warm and cozy. A wonderful children's book, and a comfort book for all ages. I thought it would be more E. Nesbitty. It is definitely British and reminds me a bit of The Enchanted Castle, but there's no dark undercurrent that in the end magic/supernatural things always go wrong. It isn't funny like Edward Eager (and definitely not American), but it has his same lightness. Anne of Green Gables plus The Secret Garden with actual ghosts. Where has this book been all my life? I should have been reading it age 8, not age 31 (well, maybe again age 31). I wish I had discovered it earlier.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The Children of Green Knowe, originally published in 1954, is the first book in a series of six fantasies written by L.M. Boston. It is sold as a children's fantasy for the 9-12 years age group, but Boston said that she wrote the books to please herself. The writing is atmospheric and evocative with beautifully descriptive language and a subtle, layered plot that will appeal to sensitive, romantic adults. The story is ghostly, magical and moody and I think will appeal to some children but not to those who rely upon a great deal of action to keep their interest engaged. The book introduces Toseland, also known as Tolly, an only child whose mother has died and whose father and stepmother reside in Burma. The book opens with Toseland's train pulling into Penny Soaky from whence he embarks for the manor house called Green Knowe or Green Noah as the locals call it, which is his ancestral home. He is ferried across the flooded landscape by Boggis, the caretaker of the manor and meets his great grandmother, Mrs. Oldknow. Even though Toseland has been apprehensive about the castle and meeting the "very old" lady, her gentle ways and the lovely surroundings of the castle welcome him. The descriptive language gently pulls the reader in and sets the mood where we and young Toseland willingly become lost in time and adrift between real and magical worlds. "His grandmother was sitting by a huge open fireplace where logs and peat were burning. The room smelled of woods and wood-smoke. He forgot about her being frighteningly old. She was wearing a soft dress of folded velvet that was as black as a hole in darkness. The room was full of candles in glass candlesticks, and there was candlelight in her ring when she held out her hand to him." Great Grandmother Oldknow's first words to Toseland are, "So you've come back!" Since he's never been at Green Knowe before, he asks her what she means by this statement and we learn that for hundreds of years the Oldknow family names have been passed down and there have been generations of Toselands, Tobys and Tollys, as well as generations of caretakers named Boggis and of girls that share grandmother's name of Linnet. Green Knowe is a romantic place set apart in time with tradition and history that are mingled with the present in magical ways that mystify and engage young Tolly as well as the reader. The various generational characters are the device that makes us happily lose our way in the slipstream of time. In Toseland's bedroom, high up beneath the ceiling beams he discovers an old painting of three children who lived 400 years in the past. They are shown with their favorite pets and toys. He sees old toys and a toy chest in the room and becomes very interested in the children. The Children of Green Knowe is at least in part a ghost story. The children in the painting reveal themselves to Tolly and become his friends. They and their mother died during one of the plagues that swept across Europe. Grandmother Oldknow can see them as well. The plot unfolds through stories that Grandmother tells Tolly and through Tolly's exploration of the manor and his attempts to know the children and their pet animals. We are swept up in the ambiance and mystery of Green Knowe and we meet St. Christopher who is a statue in the garden as well as a strangely benevolent force, a ghostly chestnut horse named Feste, a mystical and ancient salmon in a pool, and a diabolical Green Noah, whose wild and threatening persona harks back to pagan Green Man and Wicker Man mythology. A thread of Christian mysticism is woven throughout the book as well, but a subtle and unobtrusive thread that accents peacefully. There is a bright tapestry of nostalgic references here including rich descriptions of English Christmas traditions, lyrics to hymns and folk songs, tea time practices, the art of conversation, the country pleasures of a livery stable and a large topiary that also play into the magical atmosphere of Green Knowe's story. Music, animals and birds are woven throughout this tapestry as well and are as much a part of Toseland's experience as his ghostly ancestors or his loving grandmother. We see Tolly growing and developing and becoming more deeply sensitive and thoughtful. It is as if Green Knowe, set apart in time as it is, has been waiting for him to claim his ancestral traditions and his inner layers of self. I love this book for its mood of romance, its poetic language and its preservation of the gentle nuances of a bygone day. I love the ghostly almost macabre atmosphere that calmly and mysteriously leads us through the shadowy rooms of the manor house, the shady corners of its grounds and into the lives of the people who inhabit its many intersecting time streams. I think, in this day and age, that it may be too subtle to be enjoyed by most children. Some of the language is arcane and nearly all the practices depicted in the book have long since been discontinued. That is both its great beauty and its downfall. While it is a fantasy it is written in such a way that we believe it is not a fantasy at all. It seems that if we could open ourselves to the sensitivity of this bygone day that we would be able to find ourselves relating with ghosts and the wild magics of country and castle in matter of fact as well as whimsy. It does not seem fantastic at all, but strangely natural. I highly recommend this book. Here is a list of the other five books in the series: Treasure of Green Knowe The River at Green Knowe A Stranger at Green Knowe An Enemy at Green KnoweThe Stones of Green Knowe. I do, however, add a cautionary note that this book deserves to be read to a child rather than tossed at a child. There are no Quidditch games in here and no flying cars. I love Harry Potter type children's fantasy, but just because this book is lumped in with that genre in most book stores and websites, does not mean it is that type of book. It is short on action and long on atmosphere, imagery, and philosophy. It is beautiful, tender, and beguiling. Allow it to enfold you.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I never heard of this, but really enjoyed it. A young English boy goes to live with his grandmother, and encounters the ghosts of his ancestors living in her home. The house dates from the time of William the Conqueror, so Tolly meets ghosts of people who lived centuries ago, including one from the time of Charles II. I was drawn in right away, because it's written very well, and I'm a history and architecture buff. Would be a great way to inspire children to learn about history.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Well not quite 4 stars, but nearly. The story is a bit twee but has lived with me ever since - much helped by the illustrations (woodcuts?) by her son Peter Boston. They are quite frightening and a glimpse of what Lucy Boston could have unleashed on us children if she had so minded. I think I should try one of her adult books and maybe visit the house near Huntingdon.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    As a child, I loved the series of which this book is a part. I enjoyed reading it again; it's always wonderful to find that a childhood favorite doesn't disappoint when read as an adult.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I dunno. For some reason this just didn't quite hit me. I guess because I didn't feel I got to really know Tolly as an individual, or any of the characters really. The stories were interesting, the writing was graceful, the concepts enchanting - but it just felt, erm, superficial? bland? I haven't decided yet whether I'll read the second - I own it, but I may register & release it through bookcrossing & swap unread.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    As a British child of the 1950's there was something wonderfully familiar about the feel of this book. It seemed to me a classic fantasy. A wonderfully imaginative story about a little boy, Tolly, who is on his way to his great grandmother's country house for the holidays. His mother is dead and his father and stepmother are in Burma. He's a lonely but observant little fellow who makes a quick connection with his great gramdmother Oldknow, her gardener Boggis, and the other children from generations before who appear and disappear along with various birds, animals, and shadows.This is a book I can imagine a child curling up with at night and reading til finished.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The Children of Green Knowe is an elegantly written children's novel that centres on a boy named Tolly - estranged from his father and his new stepmother, he is sent to live with his great grandmother in his family's ancestral home. He is fascinated by the story of Toby, Alexander and Linnet (children antecedents who died in the 1700s during the Great Plague) and is eventually befriended by their ghosts. Tolly learns the history of the children and uncovers the secrets behind Green Noah (the demonic remnant of a gypsy curse).The Children of Green Knowe is a beautiful evocation of English Arcadia - after the implied negligence of his parents Tolly is given back his innocence by the English countryside and emotionally renewed by the care of his grandmother and by his friendship with the ghosts. Toby, Alexander and Linnet represent the spirit of a richer, more 'authentic' England - invisible to all but a select few. As his Grandmother says, 'you will see them when they've come to know you'.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This is a book I probably would have really enjoyed when I was about 10. It is a childhood favorite of my wife, the first in a series. I've seen it sitting on a shelf from when our children were young, but never picked it up until now. I've wanted to visit a few children's classics that I missed, and here is one of them. There is a gentleness to this story that I found very endearing. It is lovely. There is a simple magic to this book that slowly enchanted me. This is one to read to younger children, if you are lucky enough to still have them. With luck I will read this to a grandchild one day.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I do love Children of Green Knowe - I like Tolly, and enjoy his adventures. The matter-of-fact way magic just sort of happens is lovely. I also love the descriptions - the everyday English countryside, and all the bits of secret around Green Knowe. And a lovely ending, after one very scary scene. I know how it ends - I've read it probably a dozen times over the years - and I still hold my breath and shiver in that dark night.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I'm so glad this book has been reprinted -- it's a truly enchanting children's fantasy novel, with just the right amount of creepiness and mystery. It's also a great one to read aloud.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Lovely little old-fashioned ghost story full of eccentric characters. English kidlit done very well.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    In The Children of Green Knowe, there is only one child really. His name is Tolly, come to visit his great grandmother for the Christmas holiday. Mrs. Oldknow is a dream relation. She gives Tolly lots of freedom to explore the grounds of her castle, and slowly to become acquainted with the ghosts that live there, three children from long ago.

    The relationship between the young boy and the old woman is lovely, with many fits of giggles. Not much happens to Tolly. The action that took place long ago is told through stories told by Mrs. Oldknow. There is one truly thrilling tale of a gypsy horse thief whose mother's curse may still be lingering over the estate.

    This book feels like a warm up to future installments. Even though the ghost children lived centuries previous, the book does not read as a time travel novel, or historical fantasy, more of a ghost-fantasy. The whole proceeding is infused with longing for adventure and companionship by a very lonely boy. I think children who don't mind great writing especially descriptive writing of amazing weather would like it very much.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This is a book I held onto for a long time. It was a gift and I read it as a child and it made an impression on me, but I couldn't say what. Now that I have grown up I know exactly what it meant to me. I found a friend in Tolly. He found all the things that were missing in my childhood. I believe this to be a great piece of writing because it is timeless in how it makes the reader feel. Tolly even has to learn about how people dressed differently long ago, no different from my understanding the era this was written in. The main characters are there to hold your hand through all the good, bad , and scary parts. And best of all it leaves you wanting more and the story continues in the next book.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I had forgotten how much I love this book! Revisiting it as an adult it holds just as much charm as I remember from childhood. It's haunting, beautiful and nostalgic and a wonderful Christmas read.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    An exquisitely written, wholly involving book, as interesting for adults as for children. It is a ghost story - but eerie, rather than frightening. I was fortunate to have a classroom teacher read this to me when I was about 9 years old, and I've read it many times since, especially around Christmas time. Just remarkably beautiful -- I think you won't find better writing anywhere, for any age.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    A young boy (Tolly) visiting his grandmother at Green Knowe, works with the ghosts of children who had once lived there, to discover the final resting place of a long lost family treasure. Two of the ghosts are of a blind girl (daughter of Captain Oldknow, who was a former owner of Green Knowe), and a young, rescued slave-boy (Jacob), who was eventually adopted by the Captain as his son. Warnings: some characters use extremely racist and vile language when referring to Jacob, and they treat him cruelly when the Captain is away. They are also cruel and callous in their treatment of the blind girl when her father is out of town. There is an episode when Green Knowe is on fire, and Jacob races into the burning building to rescue the blind girl, who is his dearest friend.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I am not sure why I have never read these books before. I bought it after finding the film 'From Time to Time'. The whole concept is lovely and Lucy's story telling was superb. I don't seem to be reading the books in order but I will be reading them all.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    After a random rewatch of From Time to Time, with Maggie Smith and Dominic West, I thought I would try (one of) the Green Knowe books. Not really my style - very Enid Blyton, and horribly dated and racist - but a good story for children, based on the author's own house. Nine year old schoolboy Tolly goes to stay with his great-grandmother and visit with the 'ghosts' of children from another time. In between adventures reminscent of The Secret Garden, Mrs Oldknow recounts the story of Jacob, an African slave bought to be a companion to the blind daughter of the house. She talks like she was there at the time, which makes no sense, but perhaps she means that she was introduced to the children at a young age too. Recommended, but I would perhaps suggest the adaptation over the books!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    When I first picked this up, many years ago, I discovered that Toby and Alexander and Linnet weren't in the story, and refused to read any further in a rage. However, having moved on a little since those days, I stuck it on my Christmas wishlist and gave it a try. Very similar in tone to ‘The Children of Green Knowe’, this time it's spring, and Tolly spends his Easter holiday learning about a Regency Oldknowe and her freed-slave companion. Unlike the Stuart Oldknowes, the children in this book aren't ghosts; Tolly and they simply pass into one another's times, and even interact and impact on one another. Tolly, incidentally, has managed to grow two years in one term at school, but let that pass. This was adapted in 2009 into a not-entirely-satisfactory film under the title 'From Time to Time'.