“In days of old, when knights were bold,And journeyed from their castles,Trusty men were left behind;Knights needed not the hassles.” Jimmy Buffett

While I read Edward Eager’s Knight’s Castle, it was the first part of the above refrain that kept running through my head. “In days of old, when knights were bold” fits the second Tales of Magic book perfectly.

Soon after started the book, I had to find out who Roger and Ann and their cousins Jack and Eliza were. It’s obvious they’re related to the children in Half Magic. Jack and Eliza’s mother is Katherine from that book. Martha’s children are Roger and Ann, and we meet them first. Their father is ill, and the family is traveling to Baltimore for the summer so he can go to the hospital there. Roger packs all of his model soldiers, ones that have been in the family for generations. He has one soldier, The Old One, who precedes all the others in timeframe. Roger discovers he’s magic when he warms up in his hands, and he wishes his father was well. He also wishes for an adventure.

When they arrive at their Aunt Katherine’s, they discover gifts sent to them by Aunt Jane and Uncle Mark, a castle and a dollhouse. That first night, Roger begins his adventure, and learns about some of the rules of magic when he ends up in the past, meeting Ivanhoe, Rebecca and Rowena. There’s a siege at the castle, and Roger is in trouble when he announces to all the soldiers that they’re not real, and ends up back in bed.

Every three nights, the children end up back in that world until they learn the rules of magic. They all become famous in that world, but Roger is still wishing for his big wish to come true. He wants his father to get well.

I enjoyed this second book, but not as much as Half Magic. I have to face the fact that I’m not eleven. I still believe magic is real, but I don’t believe I’ll end up back in Ivanhoe’s day, and I really don’t want to do that. And, I don’t know how many children will enjoy the book today. But, I would recommend that a parent read Half Magic aloud to a child about that age to see if they’re ready for the adventures of Knight’s Castle.

Knight’s Castle by Edward Eager. Harcourt, Inc., 1956. 198p.


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