The Watcher was originally published in 2000 by Kids Can Press, Toronto, Ontario.
Growing up is the least of fifteen-year-old's Emma's problems. Her mother's words prove prophetic when Emma is hurtled from her quiet farm life into strange worlds of intrigue and terror.
Things spin out of control when Emma takes a summer job looking after an eccentric elderly neighbor and is drawn into playing a strange board game. For the first time in her life, she dreams -- surreal, frightening dreams that gradually begin to invade her waking hours.
Nominated for the Canadian Library Association Book of the Year Award and picked by the New York Library for their Books for the Teenage list, The Watcher is the first book in the popular and exciting Watcher's Quest Trilogy.
Award winning author, Margaret Buffie, was born and grew up in the west end of Winnipeg, attended various schools - graduating with a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the University of Manitoba. An artist for many years, Margaret decided to write a YA novel and Who Is Frances Rain? was published by Kids Can Press. It quickly became a bestseller after appearing in bookstores in 1987. Since then Margaret has published nine more YA books. She works at her home in Winnipeg during the winter and on the veranda of her cottage in Northwestern Ontario in the summer months. Margaret's books have been published in the United States, Norway, Italy, Sweden, Australia, Great Britain, Germany, China and other countries. Margaret is the recipient of the prestigious Vicky Metcalf Award for Body of Work (For writing inspirational to Canadian Youth); The Young Adult Canadian Book Award; is a two time winner of the McNally Robinson Book for Young People award and has been shortlisted for many other awards and honours.
Here are a few reviews of my first novel and most recent novel. To see more reviews for my other books go to http://margaretbuffie.com and click on each title.
WHO IS FRANCES RAIN?
REVIEW: Who is Frances Rain? is as distinctly Canadian as the intoxicating lure of silent woods and wind-whipped lakes. The textures of the narrative and the well-rounded characters are just as haunting as the ghosts Lizzie finds on Rain Island. It’s a ghost story with much to reveal to the thoughtful reader about the turbulent emotions at work within families. It’s a novel that makes us grateful for a strong new voice in Canadian literature for young people, a voice we’ll want to hear again soon. QUILL AND QUIRE
REVIEW:Who is Frances Rain? will probably be devoured by its young adult readers in one sitting. It deserves to be; this is an excellent book. TORONTO STAR
REVIEW:Buffie’s story is moody and atmospheric – the lake and the island are pungently, perfectly evoked. Lizzie’s encounters with ghosts are beautifully handled, with just the right balance of eerie and emotional moments. PUBLISHERS WEELY
WINTER SHADOWS
REVIEW:Vicky Metcalf Award-Winner MargaretBuffie returns with a breathtaking novel that is part realism, part time-travel fantasy, and part coming of age tale. Winter Shadows focuses on two young women who live in the same Manitoba home a century and a half apart..... This communication across time obviouslydraws on the conventions of fantasy, but these elements arenever forced or implausible, and there is plenty of suspense and energy to sustain the two alternating narratives." QUILL AND QUIRE, DECEMBER 2010:
REVIEW: Buffie is a master of the ghost story, carefully allowing Cass and Beatrice to drift in and out of each other's lives in convincing fashion. The convention of the diary allows Cass to connect the dots and learn more about her ancestors. The dialogue both in past and present is authentic, revealing character and moving the action along. CANADIAN MATERIALS
REVIEW: The alternating narratives are gripping, and the characters are drawn with rich complexity; even the stepmothers are finally humanized. Readers will be pulled in by the searing history of bigotry as well as the universals of family conflict, love, and friendship. Grades 7-10. AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOC. BOOKLIST: January 2011
THE DARK GARDEN
REVIEW: a first rate blend of ghost story and problem novel about Thea, 16, struggling to recover from traumatic amnesia after a bike accident. Buffie creates a tightly knit, evocatively written, and lushly (but chastely) romantic thriller. The protagonists - living and dead - are distinctly characterized; a once beautiful, now weed-choked garden is simultaneously setting and symbol of lost happiness. vivid sensory writing makes the fluctuations in Thea’s state of consciousness perfectly convincing. KIRKUS
This book was good. It was pretty much about a girl trying to figure things out that were happening. Weird things. She was also trying to figure out who she was and who she wanted to be. She notices how she isn't really like her family and how she always was and is different. She touches this crystal and also in her dreams she pretty much goes to a different world and there is people there and they talk about finding a child and winning a game and it restarting if someone finds the child first. She tries to figure out all this weird things along with watching her sick sister and trying to figure out how to help her. I feel like this book should be more well known or even a movie. I would recommend it to people who like mystery's and such.
I have a deep nostalgic love for this series. During a troubled childhood, this series became a safe and cozy home. With characters who felt like old friends whenever I revisited. There’s not been another series quite like it. So very underrated and overlooked. If the first book feels a little slow, I do encourage you to keep going. There are so many interesting and rich worlds for you to explore.
Loved reading this book again, I adored it the first time I read it, and I loved getting back in this world again!
*First Read January 1st, 2008* Oh, I'm glad I went back and read this book, after finding and reading book 2 first! Can't wait to finish out the series!
I picked this one up not so much because I thought this one would be interesting, but because its sequel looked interesting and I wanted to read them in order. Ugh. There was every reason for me to like this book, going by the inside summary, but I was very glad to put it down at the end. The "game" melded poorly with the real world; it was very obvious, at least to me, what was going on as soon as it happened, and I grew irritated at the main character's denseness in that regard. I thought there was too much focus on the politics behind the game rather than making a good plot, so when everything was resolved I thought it was too fast, too easy, and fairly arbitrary. I may yet pick up the sequel, since it was the original reason I read this book, but I hope that bloody game is completely out of the picture. Neutral.
I really like this series. I reread this book in 2011 after reading it 5 years ago and although it's for young readers it's still really enjoyable for all ages. This fantasy world is so interesting and I still have to read the final book in the trilogy. It can be quite confusing following along with some of the plot points because it's one of those books where all the answers pile up at the end, so once you finish it, it may be worth another read-through. Girls may prefer the book because it's from the perspective of a young girl but the fantasy of this book is not reserved for girls. I don't really have a perspective on what boys like, but I think the supernatural side to this story would fit anyone's tastes.
This is an intriguing YA fantasy novel about a young woman who finds herself caught up in a competition between magical beings. It was interesting enough that I'll probably seek out the sequel, but all in all I felt like there were a lot of good ideas that the writing and plotting didn't quite live up to.
I had to give this only 3 stars because it moved so slowly...it took me forever to finish it! But as I got about 3/4 of the way through it...it finally got really good. I'm liking the second book much better! If you like other worldly kind of fiction..I reccomend it.
I randomly pulled this book off the shelf in the library. I'd probably give it 3 1/2 stars - it was enjoyable, but not out of the ordinary. I liked it enough that I'll probably read the sequel though!
Preteen Jenna LOVED these books. Emma was one of the first characters that KNEW me. I was convinced Emma and I would be best friends; the hurt, confusion, loyalty, and love Emma relays throughout her quest were so palpable to me- they made her real.
Interesting, if confusing, book about a girl who discovers she is not humand and that her purpose in life is to watch/guard her sister and her family from unknown peril.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Fun read, a little to 'magical' but I did like it... I don't like however that some authors feel the need to portray teenagers as 'too dumb to put two and two together'!
This book was pretty good. I was just looking for something, anything, to read when I chose it, and it definitely captured my attention. I'd recommend it to a bored person any day. :]
Interesting so far. I do like the game / life concept, hoping to pick up more in the 2nd book, as I find it slightly confusing this far. Still a good read, thou! :)
Not at all how I remember it when I was younger. But I think I can somewhat blame that on the ebook version? There were typos left and right and the formatting was a disaster: random line breaks, everything strangely indented, sometimes centered. It was awful. I feel like it was almost abridged?
Review time: Book one of the Watcher’s Quest, “The Watcher” by Margaret Buffie. I came across these books (there are three of them) quite by accident a long time ago at a book sale held at my local library. They are YA books, but could easily be written for an older audience. Our main character, Emma, has never fit into her family. She feels an intense need to watch over them, and has a fierce, deep seated protectiveness for her younger sister Summer. When her dreams about other worlds and people coming to take her sister turn out to be true, she’ll do everything in her power to protect Summer from harm, even if that means giving in and taking her to another world full of magic. I love the way this story unfolds and how the plot and world it built. It doesn’t feel forced at all. You’re reading about teenage angst - about a girl changing her name, finding her identity - and suddenly you find yourself in a world of magic and mayhem, of war and games. It’s seamless and hard to put down for even a moment, as if the story will continue with or without you. Easily five stars ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️