If you’ve read and enjoyed E. Nesbit’s Five Children and It you’ll enjoy this. It is a sequel, written much
later and it is also somewhat darker. It was the winner of the Costa Book Awards
2014. Great news indeed that a children’s book has won that prize.
We meet the same children as before. Cyril, Robert, Jane and
Anthea are now grown up. The Lamb is now
a young boy and a further sibling, Eddie, has appeared. The Psammead, the sand
fairy, is back too, though considerably less powerful than before and bringing with
him a rather dark past.
A prologue presents us with an interim visit, just two years
after the first, in which he takes them forward to 1930. The children see
photos of themselves as grown-ups and notice that the older boys are missing.
Adults reading the story may have a frightening insight at this point. Children
may not understand what this means. However, this proves to be not too much of
a spoiler.
Kate Saunders retains the atmosphere of the earlier Nesbit
novels. Of course we still have upper middle class southerners. Times are changing,
however, under the influence of the Great War. There are changes, too, for the
sand fairy.
A very satisfying read all told.