Matthew Skelton - Endymion Spring

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Endymion Spring: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Attractively packaged in an all-important shiny cover, and clocking in at just shy of 450 pages, Matthew Skelton's debut novel is a substantial and impressive addition to the oeuvre of modern children's books that many commentators say is undergoing something of a 'Golden Age'.
Endymion Spring, feverishly sought after by many a publisher when it was completed and thrust forth upon the books community for acquisition, has catapulted its shy creator into a very large limelight. And it is attention richly deserved. It's a well-written book that impresses from the beginning.
The author expertly interweaves two narratives with aplomb. The first tells of the adventures of 12-year-old Blake Winters, who is visiting Oxford with his academic mother and his kid sister, Duck. While their mum immerses herself in dusty academia, Blake feels trapped in the rarefied air of the college library until one day, while running his finger along a shelf, something pierces his finger, drawing blood. The biting book responsible is a battered old volume, with a strange clasp like a serpent's head―with real fangs. Printed on its front are two words: Endymion Spring.
The second part of the story takes place in 1452, in medieval Mainz, the German city where Johannes Gutenberg invented the first printing press to use movable type. It's the tale of Gutenberg's young apprentice, and the sacrifices he makes to keep a precious, dangerous dragon book from falling into the wrong hands.
The publishing industry loves a rags-to-riches story, and it hit the jackpot when Matthew Skelton, a penniless academic from Oxford, wrote a first novel that sold for huge sums of money. But Skelton has justified the investment in him by writing an intriguing, dramatic and suspenseful novel that cannot to fail to entertain all those who dare to pick it up.
(Age 10 and over) – John McLay

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He started rubbing his arms up and down, wondering if she would believe him. She didn't. He stopped his play-acting.

"How angry is she?" he asked, motioning towards his mother.

"Pretty angry," said Duck. "She's stopped talking to the other professors."

That was a bad sign. It meant she was really angry — angry beyond words. The worst kind of angry.

"Where were you really?" asked Duck in a different voice, more curious.

"I told you. I went out for a walk."

He watched as his mother went to fetch her coat. She met his apologetic grin with a steely expression. The smile died almost instantly on his face.

"No, you didn't," said Duck. "You went to the library."

"Huh?"

Blake pretended not to listen, but his red cheeks were a dead giveaway.

"You went to the library," she said. "I know you did. You thought you could outsmart me by finding the blank book and solving the mystery all by yourself. You idiot! I saw you go."

He frowned. "What?"

"I saw you," she crowed. "You thought you were so sneaky, but I was watching the whole time. You're so stupid — it's a joke."

Suddenly he turned on her. "So you were the person in the library!" he cried. "I could kill you, I really could."

Several people turned, appalled by the vehemence of his words, but he couldn't control himself. The fear that had been growing inside him had found a release.

"Why did you do that?" he hollered. "You scared me half to death!"

Something in Duck's eyes made him stop. They were suddenly large and fearful, on the verge of tears. She had no idea what he was talking about.

Immediately, he realized his mistake. She hadn't seen him leave; she'd merely said this to make him feel bad. She was probably jealous because he'd been able to evade her watchful gaze and sneak out without her.

She was about to add something when their mother returned, her coat folded over her arm. Without a word, she led them out.

"I'll deal with you later," she told him icily as they followed her down the garden path. Her words hovered in the air like a frosty cloud.

7

That night, Blake awoke with a start. The book was summoning him.

Sitting up in bed, he switched on the light and blinked as the stripes on his bedroom wallpaper reappeared, one by one, like the bars of a prison. And then he remembered: the book was gone. He'd failed to find it. He let his head fall back against the pillow with a crushing sense of disappointment.

In his dream, the college library had been transformed into a magical forest. Tall trees lined the corridors, reaching up the walls, extending their brilliant canopies across the ceiling. Books filled the shelves, which were made from vast, interlocking branches. As he walked through the library, red, gold and vivid green scraps of paper drifted to the floor like autumn leaves.

Birds chattered noisily in the air above him, hopping from one branch to another; but then, in an explosion of wings, they suddenly shot off into the air, leaving the branches — the shelves — as silent and bare as winter. The building was cold and empty, apart from the blank book, which was once again lying on the floor, waiting for him to turn it over.

Mephistopheles sauntered along the corridor to meet him, a scarp of paper dangling from his mouth like a feather.

Blake shuddered at the recollection, convinced the book was trying to reach him. Then, realizing that the shiver had as much to do with the temperature of his room as his nerves, he crept to the foot of his bed to switch on the radiator beneath the window. It was freezing!

He turned the dial and waited for the primitive fossil-like coils to heat up, unused to such antiquated devices at home. The pipes groaned and quivered for a moment and then slowly filled with warmth. It was like the ghost of heat, barely noticeable, but it was better than nothing.

To ease his mind, he peered out through a gap in the blinds. Street lamps spilled pools of yellow light onto Millstone Lane and a dog barked somewhere in a neighboring yard. Otherwise, there was no sign of life. The houses were dark and deserted. Everyone was asleep.

It was the middle of the night.

Blake settled back in bed and stared at the cracks that crept along the ceiling like giant spiders. It unnerved him that the blank book had disappeared so soon after he had found it. The book had felt unusual, as though it might contain anything. The paper had an ability to make hidden words come alive, a magical power he couldn't begin to comprehend. It was as though it had contained a mind of its own — a djinn, perhaps. Some secret power. But how was that possible?

He let out a long sigh. The book was gone. He'd missed his chance to solve it.

He switched off the light and lay in the dark, a feeling of inadequacy settling over him like a blanket. And then, in the silence of his room, he became aware of a soft secretive sound spitting against the outside of his window. It might be snow, or it might be rain. But it was so nice and warm in his bed, and he felt so tired, that he didn't get up to see what it was.

His mind dissolved into the outer edges of another dream.

He was back in the library. Endymion Spring was waiting for him to pick it up.

Anxiously, before it could disappear, he curled his fingers round the worn leather spine and opened the covers. Automatically, the blank pages started riffling to reveal the riddle hidden at the heart of the book:

When Summer and Winter in Autumn divide

The Sun will uncover a Secret inside.

As Blake recited the words, he was instantly transported to a snowy scene, somewhere else, somewhere like home. White fields surrounded him like the pages of an open book and a frozen pond shone in the distance — a watermark dusted by a light sprinkling of snow.

Someone approached. Footsteps scrunched behind him. He turned round, just in time to see a clean-shaven man with a face like worn wood emerging from a fringe of frostbitten trees. The man was dressed in a fur-collared tunic with brown leggings and leather shoes that appeared to have no laces. He dragged a felled tree behind him.

Blake rubbed his eyes. The leaves were changing from blood-red to white as they passed over the snow.

On the man's shoulders sat a young girl with flaming auburn hair. She wore a filthy smock and had rust patches on her stockings. Tears clung to her cheeks. Her grim face softened into a smile when she saw Blake and she held out a grazed hand for him to hold, but her fingers passed through his like a ghost's, a whisper of contact, no more than a cobweb.

Blake took a step back and watched as the mad trudged by without a word — without a glance in his direction. The pair disappeared over the brow of a hill.

Suddenly, his parents were on either side of him. Blake gripped them with his mittened hands, but they broke free and without a word moved off in opposite directions, fading into the snow. Blake, wanted to run after them, to make them stop, but he was unable to choose which parent to follow and remained stuck in one spot. Tears welled in his eyes, icing his vision.

Then, through his misery, he glimpsed a gleam of yellow. Duck was there. Duck, as she had been since the Big Argument, her hood pulled up to hide her strange tomboy's haircut: a messy bob that no one could tame. She was peering at something in the snow, calling out for him to come and look, but her words were printed in clouds of breath and he read them rather than heard them.

He raced towards her, but no matter how hard he tried, he could not reach her. The snow was deep and his legs felt heavy. He was chained to the ground. Then she too vanished and he collapsed, too tired and lonely to go on.

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