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Catch the Wally - Hide and Seek game
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CAN WOMEN BE GENIUSES? OR ARE THEIR ARMS TOO SHORT? WHY DID WE ONLY LEARN ABOUT THREE WOMEN AT...
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U Is for Undertow (Kinsey Millhone, #21)
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Sue Grafton takes the mystery genre to new heights with this twisting, complex #1 New York Times...
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Babies are born every day, but only once or twice in a lifetime a child arrives who will inherit the...
David McK (3425 KP) rated The Horse and His Boy (Chronicles of Narnia, #5) in Books
Jan 28, 2019
The answer to that is whether you go by chronological setting (in which case it's the third), or by publication date (it's the fifth).
This is also a story that I didn't remember reading as a child; however, when I was recently re-reading it I was finding plot elements to be a little-bit-more-familiar than I was otherwise expecting: perhaps I did, and had just forgotten.
Unlike [b: The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe|100915|The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe (Chronicles of Narnia, #1)|C.S. Lewis|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1353029077s/100915.jpg|4790821], this does not follow the Pevensie children, but rather the journey of a young boy named Shasta who discovers he was adopted and is running away to Narnia when his adoptive father is about to sell him into slavery; running away alongside/with the help of the talking horse Bree. Along the way they fall in with a girl named Aravis and her talking horse Hwin, who are also making the same escape.
While I've heard arguments recently that, in this book, CS Lewis is displaying his own racist xenophobia ('fair and white ... accursed but beautiful Barbarians'), personally I think that is reading too much into what is simply intended to be a children's Arabian Nights esque fairytale
The Apprentice of Split Crow Lane: The Story of the Carr's Hill Murder
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A Victorian Murder. A Victorian Madman. A Modern Judgement. Gateshead, April 1866 The Apprentice of...
Shadows of the Wind
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The international literary sensation, about a boy's quest through the secrets and shadows of postwar...