As the story continues you are swept away into more depth and how the happenings in one world can impact another. A 100-year-old tale of an angel killed in the duty of protection (or so it seems) is raising its light amongst the people, and William is doomed to be a part. Soon, William discovers unlikely happenings at the Abbey. He begins to question processes, daily life and what happens in the world found within our own. When William learns he has “the sight,” which can lead him to evil or good. He works hard, doesn’t question much and seems to be content with the new lifestyle provided him - or rather feels he doesn’t have much of a choice for now. William, the sole survivor from a fire at his family home, has been “adopted” by the family of religious monks at Crowfield Abbey. Magic, secrets and small creatures all lead to a world within our own in “The Crowfield Curse.”ĭrawing you into the story with an immediate tie to the unknown world within our own, author Pat Walsh takes you through a descriptive and well-painted storyline. “THE CROWFIELD CURSE,” by Pat Walsh, Chicken House Scholastic, January 2012, Paperback, $7.99 (young adult)
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