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The Thirteen Treasures
 
 

The Thirteen Treasures [Paperback]

Michelle Harrison

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Product Details

  • Paperback: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster UK (Jan 5 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1847384498
  • ISBN-13: 978-1847384492
  • Product Dimensions: 19.4 x 13 x 2.2 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 240 g
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #134,177 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Product Description

While visiting her grandmother's house, an old photograph leads Tanya to an unsolved mystery. Fifty years ago a girl vanished in the woods nearby - a girl Tanya's grandmother will not speak of. Fabian, the caretaker's son, is tormented by the girl's disappearance. His grandfather was the last person to see her alive, and has lived under suspicion ever since. Together, Tanya and Fabian decide to find the truth. But Tanya has her own secret: the ability to see fairies. And, after disturbing an intruder in the night, it emerges that someone else shares her ability...The manor's sinister history is about to repeat itself...

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

Prologue

Even as a small child Tanya had known her grandmother's manor to be home to many secrets. Like everyone, she had heard of the disused escape tunnels rumoured to run beneath the house. And like most children, she spent many a rainy afternoon hunting for their concealed entrances, only to meet with disappointment. By the time she had turned thirteen Tanya had long given up hope of stumbling upon one of these secret passages and had begun to question whether they existed at all.

So when the bookcase had revolved in the wall before her to reveal a narrow stone staircase leading down into musty darkness, it hadn't altogether come as a shock. Nor, though, did it bring the delicious thrill she had so long anticipated, for the circumstances leading to its discovery were quite different from what she had imagined.

Had anyone at the manor been paying proper attention, it might have been apparent that the tunnels were being used - and had been for some time now - to access the house by somebody who had no business in doing so. But all the clues, from the radio news bulletin following the abduction to the strange slithering heard in the old servants' staircase in the dead of the night, had been overlooked. For in isolation, none of the signs had meant much.

Now, as Tanya stood face to face with the wild-eyed intruder in the dingy cavern far beneath the house, the warnings had returned and slotted into place like a key in a lock. She did not know what she had been expecting to find - but it wasn't this.

The girl was not much older than herself: fifteen at the most. Her green eyes belied a hardness and maturity far beyond her years. The knife strapped to her thigh held other possibilities that Tanya could not bring herself to consider, and so she forced herself to train her eyes on the tiny baby in the girl's arms.

The child stared back at her, unblinking. What happened next turned her stomach with fear. As the baby watched her its features warped and then morphed. The tips of the ears elongated and pointed and the skin took on a greenish hue. The eyes in their entirety flooded black, as if with ink, sparkling eerily. All this in the briefest of moments before the ghoulish vision was gone - but Tanya knew what she had seen.

And so did the red-headed intruder.

'You saw.' Her voice was a throaty whisper.

Tanya lowered her eyes to the thing in the girl's arms and swallowed a scream.

'I don't believe it,' the girl murmured. 'You saw. You can see them too.'

A moment of clarity and quiet understanding passed between them as the girl whispered something softly.

'You have the second sight.'

Tanya recoiled. 'What are you doing with that baby?'

'Good question,' the girl replied. 'Sit. I'll tell you my story. I'm sure it's one you'll find interesting.'

© Michelle Harrison 2009

SHE WAS AWARE OF THEIR PRESENCE IN the room before she even awoke.

An ominous twitching had begun in Tanya's eyelids, a sure sign that trouble was on its way. It was this incessant twitching which woke her. Her eyes opened groggily. As usual, she had reverted to her childhood habit of sleeping with her head under the covers. She was uncomfortable, yet reluctant to shift position. If she did it would alert them to the fact that she was awake.

Beneath the stifling covers, Tanya longed to kick the sheets back and allow the soft summer breeze drifting in through the window to wash over her. She tried to tell herself she had dreamed it; maybe they were not really there after all. Still she lay unmoving. For deep down she knew they were there, as surely as she knew she was the only one who could see them.

Her eyelids twitched again. Through the covers she could sense them, could feel the air in the room charged with a strange energy. She could even smell the earthy dampness of leaves, fungi, and ripened berries. It was their smell.

A quiet voice cut through the darkness.

'She sleeps. Should I rouse her?'

Tanya stiffened beneath her sanctuary of sheets. She still had the bruises from the last time. They had pinched her black and blue. A sharp prod in the ribs made her gasp.

'She is not asleep.' The second voice was cold, controlled. 'She is pretending. No matter. I do so enjoy these little...games.'

The last traces of drowsiness left her then. There was no mistaking the underlying threat in those words. Tanya prepared to throw back the sheets - but they were strangely heavy all of a sudden, weighing down on her...and they were growing steadily heavier.

'What's happening...what are you doing?'

She clawed at the sheets, frantically trying to push them away. They seemed to be wrapping themselves around her like a cocoon. For one terrifying moment she struggled for breath before managing to free her head and suck in a lungful of cool night air. In her relief it was several seconds before she noticed the glass star lantern covering the bedroom light bulb was directly in front of her face.

Suddenly, Tanya realised why the bedclothes were so heavy. She was floating in mid-air, five feet above her bed - supporting the full weight of them.

'Put me down!'

Slowly, through no control of her own, she began turning sideways in the air. The bedclothes promptly slid off and fell to the carpet, leaving Tanya hovering face down above her bed in her pyjamas. Without the shelter of the covers she felt horribly vulnerable. She pulled her hair back from her face and scanned the room. The only living thing she saw in the darkness was the cat; a ridiculous fluffy grey Persian curled in a ball on the windowsill. It got up, giving her a haughty look before turning its back to her and settling down once more.

'Where are you?' she said, her voice shaking. 'Show yourselves!'

An unpleasant laugh sounded from somewhere near the bed. Tanya felt herself being propelled forwards and before she knew what was happening she had turned a full somersault in the air, followed by another...and another.

'Just stop it!'

She heard the desperation in her voice and hated it.

The somersaulting stopped and, finally, she landed on her feet - upside down on the ceiling. The curtains billowed weirdly in the breeze. She averted her eyes, trying to steady herself. It was like gravity had reversed for her only. The blood was not rushing to her head, her pyjamas were not falling upwards, and her hair was now tumbling down her back.

She sat down on the ceiling, defeated. This was the reason they came in the middle of the night. She had figured that much out a long time ago. At night she was completely at their mercy, whereas in the day, if she happened to be caught in any strange situation she had a far better chance of passing it off as a game or trick of some kind. Just one of many 'games' and 'tricks' over the years.

She couldn't remember the first time she had seen them exactly. They had always been there. She had grown up chattering away to herself as her parents looked on, in amusement at first, then, later, with concern.

As the years passed she had learned to lie convincingly. Talk of fairies did not wash well with adults once you were past a certain age. There were no more of the knowing looks and fond smiles that came with infancy. Tanya did not take it too personally. People didn't believe in what they couldn't see.

The incidents had become more vindictive of late. It was one thing having to cut out a few tangles after an encounter with an enchanted hairbrush, or finding the answers to homework had been mysteriously tampered with overnight. But this was serious. For months now, Tanya had harboured a nagging worry that eventually something bad was going to happen, something she couldn't explain her way out of. Her worst fear was that her increasingly weird behaviour would land her on the couch of a psychiatrist.

Floating around in the air was not a good predicament. If her mother awoke to find her walking about on the ceiling it wouldn't be a doctor she called - it would be a vicar.

She was in trouble of the worst kind.

There was a waft of cool air on her face and Tanya felt the brush of feathered wings skim her cheek. A large, black bird swooped at her shoulder, its glittering eyes blinking once before the bird morphed as quickly as a shadow would vanish in the sun. Silken black hair and the pinkish tips of two pointed ears replaced the cruel, curved beak, as a woman not much larger than the bird shifted into its place. She wore a gown of black feathers; it was stark against her ivory skin.

'Raven,' Tanya whispered. She watched as a feather fell from the fairy's dress and floated lightly to the carpet. 'Why are you here?'

Raven did not answer. She alighted at the foot of the bed, next to two small figures, one plump and ruddy-nosed, the other dark-skinned, wiry and skittish-looking. Both were watching her intently. The smaller of the two was the first to speak.

'You've been writing about us again.'

Tanya felt her face burn. 'I haven't, Gredin...I didn't.'

Gredin's yellow eyes glittered, shockingly bright in contrast to his nut-brown face. 'But that's what you said last time. And the time before.'

Outside, a dark, rectangular object was drifting towards the open window as though carried on the breeze. It soared gracefully through the curtains and into the room and halted before Tanya's dismayed face. It was a journal, fairly new and in good condition - but covered in soil. She had buried it beneath the apple tree in the garden that afternoon. How foolish she had been.

'Yours I believe?' said Gredin.

'I've never seen it before.'

The plump little fellow next to Gredin snorted.

'Oh...come now,' he said. 'You wouldn't want to be up there all night, would you?' He reached up and gave the peacock feather in his cap a light stroke, then twisted his ratty moustache around his forefinger. The feather shimmered at his touch, rich with enchantment. The fat little man removed the quill from his cap and gave it a deft flick.

The diary opened, releasing a c...


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Amazon.com: 4.0 out of 5 stars (22 customer reviews)

12 of 13 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Pure Imagination Reviews, April 17 2010
By Lori Lawson - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: 13 Treasures (Hardcover)
Let me just start off by saying that whatever I say won't do this book justice. So please just go read it yourself!

In the spirit of Harry Potter, Michelle Harrison takes us on a wild ride full of mystery with her unlikely main character Tanya. See, Tanya has a bit of a uncommon condition. She can see fairies. Not cute Tinker Bell fairies but vengeful devious fairies. When the fairies play a trick on Tanya it's the last straw for Tanya's Mom. She sends her away to live with her grandmother. This is a terrible turn of events in Tanya's world but when clues start popping up in a 50 year old mystery Tanya may just get some of her question answered.

I had heard some really great things about this book so when the chance came to read it of course I took it. I was not disappointed! 13 Treasures is full of mystery. There was never a dull moment! When I wasn't reading this, I wanted to be reading this.

All of the characters were very very well written! I loved Tanya. She was mature and confident when other 13 year olds would have run screaming. All the secondary characters were great too. I loved Fabian and his Dad. I Loved the fairies also!

There are tons of books out there about girls who see fairies. This one was no different but somehow it stood out! I really loved it. It read like a movie. I actually see this being made into a movie in the near future. I had a lot of fun reading this and I plan on buying the sequel from Book Depository because there's no way I'm waiting until the American release date!!

7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars A Delightful and Dark New Series, April 12 2010
By Erika (Jawas Read, Too) - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: 13 Treasures (Hardcover)
Tanya isn't your average 13-year-old girl (or is she 12? She's young, let's leave it at that): she can see fairies. These aren't the kind to grant you wishes or help clear up acne. The fairies in Michelle Harrison's The 13 Treasures are dark, malevolent, and sometimes hideous creatures with foreboding agendas and secretive movements, determined to keep their existence a secret from bumbling mortals and make life miserable for those, like Tanya, with the Second Sight. The ability to see fairy folk has been a negative experience for Tanya.

Part One opens with a group of three fairies, Raven, Gredin, Feathercap, and a squat toadish thing Tanya dubs Mizhog, scolding our protagonist for having written about them in her diary. Despite having buried it, the fairies discovered her mistake and threaten Tanya least she slip again. To insure the lesson's learned, the fairies wreak havoc in her room and leave before Tanya's mother is alerted once more to what she believes are her daughter's tiresome antics. Finally fed up, she sends Tanya and her dog, Oberon (a lovely, slightly plump doberman), away to live with her maternal grandmother for two weeks at Elvesden Manor, an enormous family property well outside London on the outer edges of Hangman's Wood.

Tanya is resigned to her fate: her grandmother seems to find any and all reason to avoid her and when she doesn't, never fails to act distant and cold; the groundskeeper's son Fabian is a nosy, bothersome boy around the same age as Tanya. Sure that the next two weeks are going to be a boring, irritating, and insufferable existence Tanya is surprised when she discovers a door downstairs normally kept locked, like most other rooms in the Manor, opened. Peering inside and finding no one to deter her curiosity, Tanya steps inside to discover Florence (her grandmother) has a library. Inside are dozens of books on magic and fairies. Unable to resist, Tanya makes a stack and just as she's about to leave, flips through a copy of A Midsummer Night's Dream when a newspaper clipping left inside catches Tanya's eye: a girl named Morwenna Bloom disappeared in Hangman's Wood under mysterious circumstances fifty years ago and was never found.

Florence startles Tanya out of her musings and before she can get away, is shocked when her grandmother gives her some jewelry that had been stashed in the desk: a silver bracelet with 13 charms dangling off the metal. Taking her unexpected gift and stealing a copy of Myth and Magic Through The Ages, Tanya makes her way back to her room hoping to find in its pages more insights into fairies and why she in particular can see them when it seems no one else can.

What follows is the dark adventures of Tanya and Fabian working together to discover the truth behind Morwenna's disappearance, unlock mysterious doors, travel hidden passageways, all while avoiding the suspicious, watchful eyes of Florence and Fabian's father and grandfather, Warwick and Amos.

Harrison writes a wonderfully scary tale of love, family, and friendship with none of what I would have expected. The protagonist is a strong female figure who relies on her wits and strengths, unafraid to ask for help from those around her and thankfully, does not fall in love with anyone. It was such a relief to read a YA book that didn't involve a romantic coupling with the female protagonist. Rather, the romance in the book was as dark and menacing as the fairies themselves.

I really enjoyed Fabian's character and hope to see him explored a little more in the sequel, as well as, now that the events of The 13 Treasures are wrapped up, Warwick and Florence. The surprise twist ending that revealed the true relationship between Warwick and his employer was perfect! I never would have guessed it on my own.

I also am impressed with Harrison's interpretation of the fey folk and their magical world, even though I've heard a lot of it before, but her execution was especially pleasing; their interaction with the mortal world was as seamless and charming (or frightening) as I could have hoped for.

There isn't too much I want to go into because I do feel this is such an amazing find, you really need to go out and read it for yourself.

I definitely recommend this book to anyone who's a fan of fairies or wants a fun, dark, and easy read. But if you're anything like me, and your imagination gets the better of you, don't read this before you go to bed. Read it in a well-lighted room, or outside, in daylight even, with people around and lots of reassuring, life-affirming things surrounding you. The Crooked Man from The Book of Lost Things really creeped me out. There's a lot in this book that gave me the same skin-crawly feel. As sinister as it was, I can't believe I was lucky enough to get a free copy. If you liked Holly Black's Tithe books (I've only ever read the first and am clueless on the name of the trilogy), you may like Michelle Harrison's The 13 Treasures. Albeit intended I think for a slightly younger crowd, the book manages to appeal to an older audience with its dark turns and unexpected revelations.

The UK edition has lovely illustrations at the beginning of each chapter drawn by the ever so talented Miss Michelle Harrison herself!

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Unbury This Treasure, Jun 17 2010
By Galleysmith "Michelle" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: 13 Treasures (Hardcover)
A fabulous read for middle graders interested in faery tales and fantasy. Not too heavy on either, the mystical history created by Harrison was both realistic and understated. Often times, in my experience, and author gets so drawn into the creation of the other-worldly aspects of this type of story that it can tend to overwhelm. Not so in the case of 13 Treasures. The back story here is light on the faery-land and heavy on the character building. This is not to say that we don't see the world they live in because to some degree we do, just not at the expense of the events of the world that Tanya and her family are a part of.

The story itself was equally interesting. At three-hundred and fifty pages it wasn't short (particularly, I imagine, for some middle grade readers) but at no time did the story lag or become so repetitive in nature that I found myself thinking "man she could have cut out those two chapters". It had a bevy of fantastic characters including the main heroine Tanya. Spunky, defiant and true to herself she was the picture of endurance and patience as she did her best to solve the mystery presented as it unfurled. Furthermore, her foe Morewenna was just the right combination of maniacally evil and manipulative. Using creatures from another realm in consort with magic she plotted against Tanya and her family in a way that wasn't remotely over the top given the subject matter of the story.

To delve deeper into the story and characters would only serve to ruin the fun twists and turns of the story for the reader so I will leave you with this....

This book is bound to keep your middle grader's attention, moreover it's great fun for the young adult reader as well. If you are looking for a good book to segue into the realm of fantasy 13 Treasures would certainly be well worth your attention.
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 22 reviews  4.0 out of 5 stars 

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