![]() ![]() ![]() The ideals of loyalty and friendship are the most important contribution, and they provide the culmination of the second of the two books. The healing herbs are a power that works well in the fairy world. In both of these two children’s books, we see how the human world has something to offer the fairy world that it didn’t have before. While there are lots of other children’s books built around the same premise of the opening between the two worlds, these two offer yet another view. ![]() They concern the realms on the other side of the “Way,” and a young girl whose mother was of the folk, and whose father was human. I don’t usually review two children’s books together, but each book in this pair feel like they belong together. “The Way was real, and the puck-boy had come through it, and maybe the lovely woman from her dream had come through, and her own father had gone through it, gone away forever.” ![]()
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