Deptford Histories, The: The Oaken Throne | TheBookSeekers

Deptford Histories, The: The Oaken Throne


The Deptford Histories

No. of pages 480

Published: 2007

Great for age 5-12 years

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The second story in the Deptford Histories trilogy. It is a time of magic, and a time of darkness. The fierce wars between the bats and the squirrels have been raging for many years, but one night the battle for power takes an extraordinary new twist. The Starwife, leader of the black squirrels, lies dying; before she can name her successor, she is betrayed and poisoned by her trusted handmaiden. As the vicious bat army launches a devasting attack on the starwife's realm, the squirrel leader staggers to a window and calls for aid...In a different corner of the land, Vesper the young bat and Ysabelle the Squirrel maiden are as yet unaware of the events that will sweep them into a nightmarish journey to save their kind from destruction ...

 

 

This book is part of a book series called The Deptford Histories .

There are 480 pages in this book. This book was published in 2007 by Hachette Children's Group .

Robin Jarvis started writing in 1988 and quickly became a bestselling author with his Deptford Mice and Whitby Witches series. The Whitby Witches is the book that inspired his latest series, which begins with The Power of Dark. You can find out more at www. robinjarvis. com or follow him on Twitter @robinjarvis1963

 

This book is in the following series:

The Deptford Histories

'Jarvis is a great writer, in command of his intricate plotting.' -- Scottish Sunday Herald 'Jarvis is a real story teller ...' -- Carousel PRAISE FOR FLEABEE'S FORTUNE: 'This books begins a new Deptford series for younger children featuring the same brilliantly imagined and realised subterranean world. Scray and exciting, this book will grip readers from the very first page.' -- Teaching and Learning 'Bursting with action, danger, gruesome detail and some very narrow escapes these are real mouse eye views of our world from a prolific storyteller who excels at anthropomorphic tales such as this one.' -- Riveting Reads: Boys into Books 11-14, Department of Education and Skills 'This wonderful trilogy set in London is breathtaking, original and action-packed.' -- South West Mag