Alessia in Atlantis: The Forbidden Vial
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- £4.99
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- £4.99
Publisher Description
A Mom’s Choice Awards® Gold Recipient
"A book you won't want to put down." - Readers' Favorite ★★★★★
"Will enrapture middle grade fantasy readers." - Booklife (Editor's Pick)
"Imaginative and colorful... a page turner from the very first moment." - The Children's Book Review
A riveting new fantasy adventure, perfect for fans of Keeper of the Lost Cities and Percy Jackson and the Olympians.
It's not unusual for twelve-year-old Alessia to lose control of her emotions and create a scene at school.
It is unusual when one day she's attacked there by a giant frog monster and plunged into the underwater realm of Atlantis in an overturned boat.
On arriving in Atlantis, she learns that her long-lost father may have been from there. Determined to investigate, she stays and enrolls in Atlantide school: The Octopus's Garden.
But uncovering the truth is not easy when the tyrannical Atlantide Emperor forbids asking about missing people. With the help of her newfound school friends, Alessia will have to steal evidence from a grumpy teacher, escape from rebel merfolk and make rhymes with menacing blue people of Minch to discover the key to her past.
Meanwhile, someone knows exactly who she's the daughter of, and is ready to kill her for it.
Cover Design: Alessandro Brunelli
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In this Atlantis-centered exploration of identity and friendship, Scottish 11-year-old Alessia Cogner, a "short girl with deathly pale skin and roughly cropped mousy-brown hair," longs to know her dead parents, but the only thing they left her is an odd fork set and an even stranger blue gem. At her new boarding school, Alessia tries to hide her idiosyncrasy: she is "bizarrely oversensitive." Before she can settle in, however, she is lured to the sea and brought in an overturned rowboat into the depths of the forgotten world of Atlantis. There, Alessia learns that she is an Atlantide, like her father. Secretly searching for the truth behind his death, Alessia relies upon the help of new friends—a few with secrets of their own—and sets out to unravel a labyrinthine conspiracy. Laine builds a fantastical world, surrounding Alessia with imaginative creatures and richly detailed cities, including seahorse taxis and whirlpool visions. Older readers may question Alessia's ease at integrating into Atlantide society, but her innocence feels par for her age in this quick-moving, enjoyable undersea adventure. Ages 10–up. (Self-published)