The Midsummer Bride

The Midsummer Bride

by Alan Marks (Illustrator), Barbara Leonie Picard (Author)

Synopsis

Riding around his castle early one midsummer's day, Count Alaric stumbles upon a beautiful maiden. Smiling graciously, she says she does not know where she is from, or where she is going. He calls her Catherine and falls in love with her. And when she agrees to become his wife, Alaric hopes they will live a long and happy life together. Yet every time Alaric looks into his young bride's eyes, she seems to be thinking of something else. One day he finds her dancing all by herself, with no music playing. Then he notices that every year she disappears from the castle on midsummer's eve, only to return at dawn with no memories of the night past. He suspects there is a deep mystery in Catherine's past. What he does not know is that to save her, the Count has to sacrifice his love for her. This lyrical, romantic fairy tale is written by acclaimed children's author Barbara Picard and graced by Alan Marks's evocative watercolors.

$3.25

Save:$9.29 (74%)

Quantity

1 in stock

More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 28
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Published: 01 Sep 1999

ISBN 10: 0192798790
ISBN 13: 9780192798794
Children’s book age: 5-7 Years

Media Reviews
Marks's watercolors add a misty flavor of magic to Picard's tender telling of her own fairy tale. --Kirkus Reviews
Marks' misty, blue-shaded watercolors capture the delicacy and strength of Picard's original fairy tale, where the indefinable is powerful, and true love is part of the wind and sky. --Booklist


Marks's watercolors add a misty flavor of magic to Picard's tender telling of her own fairy tale. --Kirkus Reviews
Marks' misty, blue-shaded watercolors capture the delicacy and strength of Picard's original fairy tale, where the indefinable is powerful, and true love is part of the wind and sky. --Booklist

Marks's watercolors add a misty flavor of magic to Picard's tender telling of her own fairy tale. --Kirkus Reviews
Marks' misty, blue-shaded watercolors capture the delicacy and strength of Picard's original fairy tale, where the indefinable is powerful, and true love is part of the wind and sky. --Booklist


Marks's watercolors add a misty flavor of magic to Picard's tender telling of her own fairy tale. --Kirkus Reviews


Marks' misty, blue-shaded watercolors capture the delicacy and strength of Picard's original fairy tale, where the indefinable is powerful, and true love is part of the wind and sky. --Booklist