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The Power of the Rellard

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Lucy, repeating the fourth grade after a malady of the nervous system has left her with a withered arm, finds herself and her siblings in the midst of a power struggle with agents of an ancient evil.

288 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1986

3 people are currently reading
61 people want to read

About the author

Carolyn Logan was born and grew up in Iowa, in the Mid West of the United States of America. After several years as a secondary school art teacher in Honolulu and San Fransisco, she married and subsequently taught in primary schools in Peru and Denmark. She lived and worked in Perth, Western Australia, for many years as a librarian, teacher and editor. She now lives in the USA.

-from: Fremantle Press

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5 stars
40 (56%)
4 stars
19 (26%)
3 stars
9 (12%)
2 stars
3 (4%)
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0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews
Profile Image for Anastasia.
214 reviews11 followers
March 21, 2009
I checked out this book from the library on a near constant basis when I was younger, before convenient online used book shopping. I tried to find a copy everywhere, and was about to have one ordered at great expense from a used bookstore hunter when I stumbled across it in a books a million clearance bin. Apparently, other people didn't love it as much as I did. The story premise struck me as fairly unique at the time: a girl is seriously injured, leaving her arm dead, and to make her feel better her brother and sister play a game with her over the summer, a game that is supposed to end in the winner taking on magical power. it goes into traditional fantasy territory from there, but the school-based dramas and evil teachers are successful even if they are caricatures. The slow move from the seemingly real to the perfectly outrageous kept me thoroughly entranced as a kid, and I still have that mass market paperback waiting for me on my shelf, somewhere between Harry Potter and the Chrestomanci novels.
Profile Image for Daneca.
55 reviews1 follower
March 14, 2015
One of my favourites when I was kid. I loved this book! I can still grasp the emotions I felt throughout reading it. The characters are truly captivating and the ending blew me away.
Profile Image for Kate.
Author 15 books900 followers
September 30, 2009
I didn't remember reading this book until I found a copy in my library's book sale room. That cover image is pretty hard to forget! The story was something about three siblings, the youngest Lucy having a withered hand, and they play a game that somehow becomes real.
25 reviews
July 30, 2008
Did anyone besides me and my sixth grade best friend read this book? I remember being obsessed with it...I wanted it to be my life.
Profile Image for Robyn.
7 reviews
June 30, 2008
Although this book is for young readers, it is still my all-time favorite fiction book. I have read it three times and still love it.
Profile Image for Rhiannon.
17 reviews1 follower
November 1, 2011
I read this book so many times as a kid, and I still own and read it from time to time. It is one of my childhood favorites!
Profile Image for Ariel Schnee.
5 reviews
July 3, 2019
I LOVED this book!^_^

I first read it back when I was waaay much younger. I'm 47 now. I bought it when it first came out in paperback in Waldenbooks.

This is one of the GREAT books! One I so immensely enjoyed reading then. Seeing it here takes me back to my younger years, back when everything was better.

Profile Image for Deborah.
Author 10 books24 followers
February 3, 2019
So . . . they were given the power to defeat the evil power that only showed up because they had the power?
Profile Image for Capn.
1,374 reviews
Currently reading
January 12, 2026
"She really believes, Shelley!"
"She can't!"
"When I put that ring thing on her head, she shivered."
"C'mon, Georgie . . ."
"She did, Shelley, she did! She thinks she is the Rellard! Shelley, what'll we do now?" . . .

And so, a game invented to pass the time one summer becomes real, plunging Georgie, Shelley and their little sister into fantastic adventure - a battle of wits and magic against the forces that seek to destroy them and their home.
Their enemies are powerful; all the more because they hide behind commonplace disguises. But their friends are powerful too, and do all they can to help and protect the children as they struggle to control and protect the mysterious gift Lucy has been given - the Power of the Rellard.
An exciting and gripping adventure, winner of the Angus & Robertson Writers for the Young Fellowship.
Cover illustration by Tony Pyrzakowski
POWER PLAY
Shelley, and her younger brother, Georgie, are getting worried! They made up a game - an elaborate series of athletic 'trials' - to cheer up their little sister, Lucy, who's recovering from a bad illness, and now she's getting all weird about it. Everyone had been so pleased when Lucy won the contest despite her weakness that they decided to celebrate. They crowned her the Rellard, Wielder of Power, and conferred upon her a special 'magic talisman'. It was fun at first, until the game started to take control! Now Lucy believes in the magic and claims that a fantastic winged creature has asked their help to fight a dark and terrifying evil. Georgie and Shelley don't know what to think. After all, the Rellard is just a game . . . isn't it?
On OpenLibrary
Profile Image for L (Nineteen Adze).
389 reviews51 followers
Read
June 29, 2022
I don't want to put stars on this one because it's hard to pin down. When I was eight-ish, this book felt beautiful and endless. Coming back to it as an adult, there's some fun from the nostalgia and some chapters really shine, but I don't think I would enjoy it as much if I was reading it for the first time.

A key part of the charm is the way that the Power is so real to Lucy, Shelley, and Georgie and so utterly an imaginary concern or a game to all the adults. That element landed more strongly when I was a child, I think, and it's great that the oldest ally in the book is a teenager-- there's no guiding adult mentor figure to shape how Lucy uses her power or to intervene when things are dangerous, which gives the story a certain wildness.

I'm glad I found this one-- I smiled to see the cover again-- but it's rare to find books that hold up to the glory you remember.
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews

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