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The Boggart (The Boggart #1)
by
Susan Cooper (Goodreads Author),
Omar Rayyan
When the Volnik family of Toronto inherits an ancient castle in Scotland, they also inherit the Boggart, a mischievous spirit that has lived there for centuries. When the Volniks unwittingly bring the Boggart back to Canada, the results are explosive.
Paperback, 196 pages
Published
December 12th 2001
by Aladdin
(first published 1993)
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Cooper, Susan. The Boggart, Aladdin Paperbacks, 196 pages. Fictional chapter book, fantasy.
Description: A Scottish spirit called the Boggart is unwittingly taken to Canada when a Canadian family inherits his castle. Emily and Jessup, the kids, struggle to communicate with the Boggart and get him to stop playing his disruptive tricks.
Review: This book is at its best at the beginning and end of the story, when the Boggart resides on his Scottish Island. The prose is incre...more
Description: A Scottish spirit called the Boggart is unwittingly taken to Canada when a Canadian family inherits his castle. Emily and Jessup, the kids, struggle to communicate with the Boggart and get him to stop playing his disruptive tricks.
Review: This book is at its best at the beginning and end of the story, when the Boggart resides on his Scottish Island. The prose is incre...more
The Boggart is a fairly entertaining young adult novel. It's a fast paced story that is difficult to put down yet still challenging enough for young readers. The characters are easy for kids to relate to even if the technology referenced throughout the book is very outdated by today's standards.
While visiting their inherited castle in Ireland, the Volnik family mistakenly traps and takes the castle's boggart back to Canada with them. Strange occurrences begin to happen from the moment ...more
While visiting their inherited castle in Ireland, the Volnik family mistakenly traps and takes the castle's boggart back to Canada with them. Strange occurrences begin to happen from the moment ...more
Contemporary children's fantasy novel. Long before the Harry Potter books, I learned about boggarts from Susan Cooper, thanks to this book.
The Volnick family in Canada learns that the father has inherited Castle Keep in Scotland, and briefly live there while making arrangements to sell the delapidated home. To assuage the children's sadness at not being able to keep the castle, the parents allow Emily and Jessup to each take one item back to Toronto.
The boggart of the tit...more
The Volnick family in Canada learns that the father has inherited Castle Keep in Scotland, and briefly live there while making arrangements to sell the delapidated home. To assuage the children's sadness at not being able to keep the castle, the parents allow Emily and Jessup to each take one item back to Toronto.
The boggart of the tit...more
This was actually my second time through Susan Cooper's The Boggart, with the first being a read-aloud with my fourth grade class. I found this copy at a resale shop, and couldn't resist buying it since I have found memories of my fourth-grade teacher, and vaguely remember that I always liked her taste. Although The Boggart isn't the greatest piece of literature, and definitely not as timeless as Susan Cooper's award-winning Dark is Rising series, it was definitely a fun read and creative. It...more
When a Canadian family inherits a Scottish castle, they also inherit the Boggart, a mischievous ancient spirit who delights in playing pranks and being a general nuisance. Unfortunately for the Boggart, he accidentally ends up shipped back to Canada along with some of the castle's furnishings, and that's when the trouble starts.
Emily and Jessup, the two main characters, have to figure out just what's causing all the weird occurrences in their normally placid suburban life, and once t...more
Emily and Jessup, the two main characters, have to figure out just what's causing all the weird occurrences in their normally placid suburban life, and once t...more
I really enjoyed this book when I first listened to it a couple of years ago. It's very entertaining. But when I read it this time, considering it for the anthology of excerpts from recent children's books that I'm putting together, I realized that it really isn't anything more than fun. That's fine, but I'm not sure it belongs on a list of the best children's fantasy of the past 25 years. It's dated in terms of the technology, and there really aren't any issues in it. The boggart is adorable a...more
When a Canadian family learns they've inherited a keep in Scotland they discover a lot more than they bargained for. Along with crumbling bricks and nice furniture they also get a mischievous boggart. The Boggart is inadvertently transported from Scotland to Canada and all sorts of mayhem ensues.
A fun, fast read that is quaintly sweet. This is a good book to share with a kid and there are some fun part that had me laughing. I liked the Boggart's character and the way Cooper portrayed...more
A fun, fast read that is quaintly sweet. This is a good book to share with a kid and there are some fun part that had me laughing. I liked the Boggart's character and the way Cooper portrayed...more
Susan Cooper, most famous for her heavily mythic Dark is Rising Sequence, returns to a lighter-hearted storytelling hinted at with Over Sea, Under Stone.
It's a simple story about a Canadian family that suddenly inherits a castle in Scotland. After going over to see it and taking home some mementos, they accidentally bring home a boggart. Most of the adults refuse to believe that anything supernatural is going on, and a psychiatrist interested in poltergeist phenomena makes for a fun...more
It's a simple story about a Canadian family that suddenly inherits a castle in Scotland. After going over to see it and taking home some mementos, they accidentally bring home a boggart. Most of the adults refuse to believe that anything supernatural is going on, and a psychiatrist interested in poltergeist phenomena makes for a fun...more
It's always kind of hard to fully appreciate a book meant for adolescents as an adult, at least if nostalgia isn't playing your heartstrings, but I do think that Susan Cooper tells a mighty good story. This is only my second encounter with the legend of the Boggart (the 1st occurrence being Harry Potter) & it really made me want to look into the myth further. Susan Cooper does a very good job of weaving ancient stories into modern stories and that's a good part of what I really appreciate abou...more
I picked this up because I love Susan Cooper's The Dark is Rising sequence, and wanted to try something else of hers. Once again, she's got magic and mayhem together blending history and modern day (though in actuality, the story was written nearly 2 decades ago, and the changes in technology, particularly computer technology, were apparent.) Still, it was a fine story, and combined enough folk lore to keep me reading. There are apparently more in the series, but I may not go on. So many boo...more
Kaye
rated it
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
readers who enjoy fantasy
Shelves:
2009
Susan Cooper is one of my favorite authors. Her words are so "visual", she paints a picture in your mind as you read. Her narrative is so descriptive you can "hear" the haunting sound of the gulls as they sail above the sea shore. I could actually believe I was driving over the moors of Scotland, visiting a castle for the first time. Her writing is a treat for the senses, to be savored and enjoyed.
The story itself is completely delightful, with the Boggart being a...more
The story itself is completely delightful, with the Boggart being a...more
I believe that I would actually give this book two and a half stars.
Susan Cooper's writing in The Boggart comes sort of in alternating spurts of action and quiet reflection, humor and genuinely touching moments that go for maybe forty pages or so before smoothly changing to another tact. The method works well for this story, I think. The tale of the Boggart stands out as different from most other kid lit offerings while retaining the premier powers of Susan Cooper's almost gothic style. ...more
Susan Cooper's writing in The Boggart comes sort of in alternating spurts of action and quiet reflection, humor and genuinely touching moments that go for maybe forty pages or so before smoothly changing to another tact. The method works well for this story, I think. The tale of the Boggart stands out as different from most other kid lit offerings while retaining the premier powers of Susan Cooper's almost gothic style. ...more
When Emily and Jessup's parents inherit an old Scottish castle, they don't realize they have also inherited the boggart who lives there. The boggart, an invisible mischievous spirit, has lived in Castle Keep for generations. When the boggart accidentally gets himself shipped to the Volnik's home in Toronto, nothing will ever be the same - for the Volnik's or the boggart. He wreaks unending havoc on the family and wants desperately to go home. Will he make it back to Scotland? A very cute story.
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It wasn't as scary as I'd hoped it would be. The boggart is more of a trickster rather than someone who wants to do harm. Towards the end, you sort of feel bad for the guy.
Someone else did make a good point. The computer part of the book is very dated. I don't know that kids would know what an 8" floppy is, or that computers didn't always come in color. Other than that, I still approve, although I might have to give it 3 1/2 stars instead.
Someone else did make a good point. The computer part of the book is very dated. I don't know that kids would know what an 8" floppy is, or that computers didn't always come in color. Other than that, I still approve, although I might have to give it 3 1/2 stars instead.
I really liked this book - Cooper has a great way of humanizing characters so one can really connect with them. The Boggart and the kids were terrific, and one could only hope for a sequel which it seems she has not written! I will check out the Boggart and the Monster, but it seems this will not be the sequel I am looking for.
This book was great fun however, and should have been a terrific read for kids in the age group she was targeting.
This book was great fun however, and should have been a terrific read for kids in the age group she was targeting.
The Volnik family travels to Scotland to see the castle which they have inherited. After shipping some pieces of furniture, they return home to Canada. Then strange things begin to happen. Emily and Jessup, the Volnik children, discover that a boggart was concealed in the box. The boggart insists that he must be returned to Scotland. As the havoc increases, Emily and Jessup frantically try to find a way to send him home.
This was a lot of fun. The story's setting starts in Scotland and there are plenty of funny old British English and Gaelic words to look up and learn. Susan Cooper does a great job portraying the lifestyle, customs and castle in a small town in mid-20th century Scotland.
Well... I'm actually giving this book 4 stars because it was really good when I first read it, in like 3rd grade. I'm pretty sure it wouldn't be as great if I read it again because it's really old and the technology (a major part of the story) would definitely be dated.
With the completion of this book, I am officially half way through the stack of books I must read for Battle of the Books, a mere ten days away. Five more to go!
I looooved Susan Cooper's Dark is Rising series. I read it numerous times when I was younger. I didn't realize she had been such a prolific author. The Boggart, while nowhere near as wonderful as Dark is Rising, is OK. It's a quick, easy read that gets into issues of home and family when a Canadian family go to check out thei...more
I looooved Susan Cooper's Dark is Rising series. I read it numerous times when I was younger. I didn't realize she had been such a prolific author. The Boggart, while nowhere near as wonderful as Dark is Rising, is OK. It's a quick, easy read that gets into issues of home and family when a Canadian family go to check out thei...more
I'm a fan of Susan Cooper and her "Dark is Rising" series, so I expected the same intrigue with this book. The Celtic spirit Boggart was interesting, but I found the book boring in places. Maybe my problem is because it is contemporary fantasy.
I love this book. I love Susan Cooper's style of writing - she makes me want to go to Scotland! I love her description of the Boggart, how he is always just trying to have fun. I love how smart and independent the children are and yet the parents aren't non-existant or stupidly unaware, like in cartoons or some other books. Andrew and I are looking forward to the sequel and other Susan Cooper books.
Currently reading this one. If you like Scottish castles and are fond of Toronto, you might like this. The story is good, the writing is lacking, I'm finding. But the verdict is still not out yet since I haven't finished it yet!
I was initially charmed by this book because it was set in Canada. But by the end of the book, I didn't like it quite as much. I felt like the book dragged on with the same problems: Boggart creates a mess, the children don't know how to stop it, the children get into trouble. I think that set up would have been more enjoyable if it were presented in a more light hearted, adventuresome manner. But it wasn't. It wasn't fun, which is what I was expecting.
I read this as a kid and LOVED it. I must have read it a dozen times. Which is sad since I can hardly remember any of the plot. So give it a try. Blame my childhood self if you don't like the recommendation.
The technology unfortunately is ridiculously dated, which distracts and detracts too much from the story. I might actually have liked this a 4 star, but I just don't remember. Sorry for not being more help.
Enjoyable tale from the author of Dark is Rising series of a misplaced mischief-maker brought home to Canada and how he was returned. My wife and sone enjoyed the book as much as I did.
A pleasant story about a boggart and his affect on a family. I liked that the boggart wasn't just simply annoying but had some character development.
Susan Cooper is very creative. I love her style of writing. This is a good book through ya and adult eyes. Something just a little different.
When I was in high school, we had to read a book of choice every nine weeks or so. I read this childish but entertaining book my sophomore year.
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Susan Cooper was born in 1935, and grew up in England's Buckinghamshire, an area that was green countryside then but has since become part of Greater London. As a child, she loved to read, as did her younger brother, who also became a writer. After attending Oxford, where she became the first woman to ever edit that university's newspaper, Cooper worked as a reporter and feature writer for London...more
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“But once in a great while he remembered that he had felt pain, a terrible ache in his heart, and he swore he would never let himself feel love for a human again.”
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