Jack and Annie's last adventure was on the summer solstice. Now it is the first day of winter and Merlin sends them on a journey, along with friends Teddy and Kathleen, to the Land Behind the Clouds, an icy, frozen place. As it turns out, an Ice Wizard, the Wizard of Winter, actually tricked them into coming on the journey. He has enchanted Merlin and Morgan le Fay and he wants the children to recover his lost eye. If they bring it back to him, he will return Merlin's Staff of Strength to him.
The Ice Wizard gives them a wind string to help them on their journey to find his eye. They must follow this rhyme:
. . . Take my sleigh and find your way
To the House of the Norns in the curve of the bay.
Pay them whatever they tell you to pay
And brink back my eye by break of day . . .
The wind string produces wind when you untie the knots on it, and slows the wind down when you tie a new knot in it. So the children are able to control the speed of the sleigh. They encounter some white wolves which they try to outrun in the sleigh. They find the Norns, who are the Norse equivalent of the Fates. They are busy weaving lives. From the Norns, the children learn that the Ice Wizard had a sister who loved him very much but they had a terrible argument and she left to become a swan maiden. They have been parted for many years and that is why the Ice Wizard is so unhappy.
The four friends must journey to the Hollow Hill where the Frost Giant lives to recover the Wizard's lost eye. Annie pays the Norns with the scarf around her neck and they children head off to find the eye. There is a lot of action, and the wolves show up again, but they do find the eye and get back to the Ice Wizard in the nick of time. The Ice Wizard becomes very angry when his eye doesn't work, but then Kathleen shows him that she has found his sister! He is so happy that he starts to cry and he can then see clearly from his eye. The Wizard gives the Staff of Strength to Jack and tells Jack to call for Merlin and Morgan. When he does, the wolves turn into Merlin and Morgan!
I really liked this one. There were lessons about love, loyalty, forgiveness, faith, and courage.
Borrowed this from great nephew Drew's library.