19th out of 92 books
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83 voters
The Wish House
by
Celia Rees (Goodreads Author)
From the best-selling author of WITCH CHILD and SORCERESS comes another engrossing, atmospheric novel — following a teenage boy as he uncovers the secrets of the mysterious and provocative Wish House.
It's the start of summer vacation, and fifteen-year-old Richard has discovered that a family has taken up residence in the usually deserted Wish House. Richard is intrigued by...more
It's the start of summer vacation, and fifteen-year-old Richard has discovered that a family has taken up residence in the usually deserted Wish House. Richard is intrigued by...more
Hardcover, 272 pages
Published
August 22nd 2006
by Candlewick Press
(first published March 4th 2005)
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3.5 stars
This review originally appeared at www.readinasinglesitting.com.
Languid, dark and poetic, The Wish House is unlike any young adult novel I’ve read recently. In fact, with its rich language and dark undercurrents it exhibits a similar aesthetic to Helen Dunmore’s Talking to the Dead. Even the setting is similar: a blazing hot summer, so hot that the world seems to fade and feather a little, and a ramshackle manor beneath the roof of which all sorts of amoral curiosities appear to be play...more
This review originally appeared at www.readinasinglesitting.com.
Languid, dark and poetic, The Wish House is unlike any young adult novel I’ve read recently. In fact, with its rich language and dark undercurrents it exhibits a similar aesthetic to Helen Dunmore’s Talking to the Dead. Even the setting is similar: a blazing hot summer, so hot that the world seems to fade and feather a little, and a ramshackle manor beneath the roof of which all sorts of amoral curiosities appear to be play...more
Gothic, compelling, this is the sort of YA fiction that is entirely accessible to older readers. In fact, I’d suggest it’s not suitable for the youngest YA readers as the plot revolves around the sex life of the central character.
It’s a thing I keep running into – in erotica, authors do not dare have characters under the age of eighteen. (Age of consent in the USA). In the UK, if you’re writing something a bit more literary, then underage sex isn’t merely acceptable, it seems almost to be an ess...more
It’s a thing I keep running into – in erotica, authors do not dare have characters under the age of eighteen. (Age of consent in the USA). In the UK, if you’re writing something a bit more literary, then underage sex isn’t merely acceptable, it seems almost to be an ess...more
Feb 06, 2013
Molly Westemeyer
added it
In this book you meet Richard, a teenager who is trying to fill his summer after he finds out that his childhood friend has grown and become a full time worker for his father. He meets a family that is beyond odd. The "father" is a painter that spends most of his time in his painting room. The "daughter"(of whom Richard falls head-over-heals for and is a sexual partner) toys him along in a game and webs of lies. The "mother" has many 'partners'. The "son" is portrayed as a lay back kind of guy (...more
"The Wish House" is one of those coming of age stories that will either be a hit or a miss with its readers. I usually love summer themed, coming of age stories where the character grows in some manner during his or her experiences in a place outside of their usual dwellings, but this one left me wanting more than what it provided.
The story takes place in the 1970s. 15-year-old Richard spends the summer with his family in South Wales near an interesting dwelling called "The Wish House." What he...more
The story takes place in the 1970s. 15-year-old Richard spends the summer with his family in South Wales near an interesting dwelling called "The Wish House." What he...more
Dull, boring and uninteresting is what I would label this book. It just seemed lifeless and the plot seemed to me to hold no imagination or creativity what so ever to it. It just was not exciting nor engaging in any sort of way and I just wanted the book to come to an end, merely because I am too stubborn to put down a book I have started to read. Compared to her other novel that I have read, I was say this was a very immature novel. There just seemed to be no common ground or theme to it and th...more
Review: Every summer, as far back as he can remember, Richard's family has brought their camper to the Welsh countryside.
It's there that his friend Dylan and him roam the woods as unsupervised as a kid can get.
No parents, no adults.
This summer though, Richard is left alone, abandoned by Dylan.
It is now, that Richard goes back to "The Wish House".
A place that Dylan and him discovered some years ago.
But now, he finds it to be occupied instead of abandoned.
The Dalton family as come back for their h...more
It's there that his friend Dylan and him roam the woods as unsupervised as a kid can get.
No parents, no adults.
This summer though, Richard is left alone, abandoned by Dylan.
It is now, that Richard goes back to "The Wish House".
A place that Dylan and him discovered some years ago.
But now, he finds it to be occupied instead of abandoned.
The Dalton family as come back for their h...more
Welcome to the world of artistry... this book tackles the significant role of art into one's wholeness. a story about a 15 year, Richard who used to camp with his friend every summer in an abandoned house- the wish house (because of the sound that created by the reverberation of the wind through the leaves of the trees, creating a sound of a "wisssshhhh")who later became occupied by a well-knowned painter and with his strange family which brings Richard into a unusual dimension. the book per se...more
I loved the intro of each chapter with the description of a painting or drawing. I thought it gave each chapter an almost magical feel. It made the world, for me, so real it was almost tangible.
I thought this was a great story about first love and first loss. About the possessive struggle within yourself that you may experience with "your first".
There will never be another "first" like that and sometimes it's hard not to want to smother that person ~ want to hold them and constantly be near the...more
I thought this was a great story about first love and first loss. About the possessive struggle within yourself that you may experience with "your first".
There will never be another "first" like that and sometimes it's hard not to want to smother that person ~ want to hold them and constantly be near the...more
This was a strange book for me to read because the boy and girl were exactly my own age (i.e. I was also 16 in 1976) and yet I didn't seem to recognise them at all. It didn't remind me much of what it was like to be a teenager in the UK in the 1970s. It reminded me more of the Agatha Christie book Five Little Pigs published 1942. Still, that's one of my favourite Agatha Christies and I enjoyed this too. 3 and a half stars really.
This is the book that made me fall in love with the idea of bohemian lifestyle. Placed on the later 70's this book travels you in a world so much different than ours without the technical achievements that involve our world.
It is summer and our main character, a 15-year-old boy named Richard goes on family vacation on South Wales. It's the place that he and his family going on vacation for several years. But this time something changed. In a big house no far from where his staying is leaving a f...more
It is summer and our main character, a 15-year-old boy named Richard goes on family vacation on South Wales. It's the place that he and his family going on vacation for several years. But this time something changed. In a big house no far from where his staying is leaving a f...more
I found this book highly captivating. It grabbed me and wouldn't let me go. I know I'll be thinking about the themes and emotions it brought to the surface for a long time. It's harsh, slightly tragic, real, scary, beautiful and somewhat erotic all at once. It doesn't seem like a children's book or even a young adult book to me at all though. I was rather surprised by this, given its' publisher imprint and the other books this author has written in the past. It's definitely more a book about you...more
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The book was captivating in its descriptions of this eccentric family that Richard finds himself getting attached to. The descriptions of the paintings also add to its suspense as art and reality start to blend. I loved how it began, and how the story was looking back through the series of paintings. In the beginning, you are mystified by the secrets of the characters and the paintings, and at the end, you find a sense of relief-- the same that you imagine Richard feels as well.
Jul 29, 2011
Kaalomai
added it
intriguing interesting atmospheric, great characters, unique story lines. kept me interested and engaged from start to finish. listened to it on tape in between la and belmont. very colorful and engrossing.
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Celia Rees (born 1949) is an English author of children's literature, including some horror and fantasy books.
She was born in 1949 in Solihull, West Midlands but now lives in Leamington Spa with her husband and teenage daughter. Rees attended University of Warwick and earned a degree in History of Politics. After university, she taught English in Coventry secondary schools for seventeen years, dur...more
More about Celia Rees...
She was born in 1949 in Solihull, West Midlands but now lives in Leamington Spa with her husband and teenage daughter. Rees attended University of Warwick and earned a degree in History of Politics. After university, she taught English in Coventry secondary schools for seventeen years, dur...more
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“Artists often collect. Sometimes compulsively. They hang on to things. They don’t want to let go. Like paintings. I don’t want to part with them. Some I won’t sell at any price. I don’t even let people see ‘em. - We don’t like change, and we’re possesive. Maybe that’s why we do it. We want to hang on to things, hang on to the one time. We don’t want to let it go; we want to capture it and keep it forever. Or one person. How she was then. At that moment. That’s what I want - to stop time, to have that power.”
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