Enchanter's Child, Book Two: Midnight Train Audiobook By Angie Sage cover art

Enchanter's Child, Book Two: Midnight Train

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Enchanter's Child, Book Two: Midnight Train

By: Angie Sage
Narrated by: Morag Sims
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In the second magical volume of the Enchanter’s Child
duology, the bestselling author of the Septimus Heap series, Angie Sage, crafts a
stunning finale filled with humor, drama, and nonstop action, just right for
fantasy-adventure lovers.


In the first book of the Enchanter’s Child duology, Alex
discovered the truth: Not only does she possess magical powers but her father
is Hagos RavenStarr, who was once the king’s Enchanter.


Alex is pursued by the fiendish Twilight Hauntings,
monstrous Enchantments created because a prophecy foretold the king’s death at
the hands of an Enchanter’s Child. The Twilight Hauntings are designed to rid
the land of all Enchanters and their children, but Alex has other ideas. Why
should she be forced to leave the place where she belongs?


So now Alex is on a mission to destroy the Twilight
Hauntings. And to do so she must find the very thing that created them—a
magical talisman called the Tau.


But where is it?


In her search for the Tau, Alex enlists the reluctant help
of her father and a strange assortment of people along the way. As she travels,
Alex hones her magical skills and learns that even family and friends can
surprise her.


Praise for the first book in the Enchanter’s Child
duology, Twilight Hauntings:


"Intricate worldbuilding, richly evocative settings,
nuanced characters, deftly woven plotting, and wry humor. An unmitigated
delight." —Kirkus Reviews (starred review)


"Fans of fantasy and adventure will snap this up and
eagerly await the sequel." —School Library Journal (starred review)


"Sage deftly crafts an endearing and familiar fantasy
story, expertly characterizing distinct, extreme personalities. Fantasy fans
will highly anticipate the next steps in Alex’s journey in the projected sequel
of the Enchanter’s Child duology." —Bulletin of the Center for
Children's Books

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The comedy of mistaken identities and close calls, gets turned into a sad list of lost opportunities. Idiocy begins somewhere around 15: adults (aka the King) destroy train systems; young teens refurbish and deploy a steam engine. While the kids lube the bearings, push the coal tender by hand, feed the boiler coal, add water, and clear a landslide, the adults struggle with a malfunctioning bell. I do have some questions: Why blow the whistle? How did the rails get shiny?
One common element of Sage writing - no one has a romantic dimension; except here there is one indiscretion.

If enchantments R possible, so is this train ride

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