Dio and Cal had gone to ask the old man for permission to marry, Instead, Dio finds himself commanded to be Guardian of the Torch in the old man's stead. Without quite knowing why, they embark on an extraordinary journey, bearing the Torch in search of the Games! In doing so, they learn some secrets of the Torch and of the mysterious past time called 'Ago', a time of wonderful machines now lost for ever.
This is a remarkable and riveting adventure story by an award-winning writer at the height of her powers.
Jill Paton Walsh was born Gillian Bliss in London on April 29th, 1937. She was educated at St. Michael's Convent, North Finchley, and at St. Anne's College, Oxford. From 1959 to 1962 she taught English at Enfield Girls' Grammar School.
Jill Paton Walsh has won the Book World Festival Award, 1970, for Fireweed; the Whitbread Prize, 1974 (for a Children's novel) for The Emperor's Winding Sheet; The Boston Globe-Horn Book Award 1976 for Unleaving; The Universe Prize, 1984 for A Parcel of Patterns; and the Smarties Grand Prix, 1984, for Gaffer Samson's Luck.
I read this book because I need to teach it to my year 9 students and it turns out that I really enjoyed it. It poses some questions that have the potential to change your outlook on life in general, especially in terms of tecnological advances. What would happen if we had nothing else to invent or create. It puts life in perspective in a sense.
This book looks at a world that has regressed due to having done everything before and ruined life as we know it because of that. The torch is of course the olympic torch, which in itself is a symbol for life in a constant state. The kids in the book are entrusted with taking the torch around the world in order to find races. In doing so they find different types of people, cultures and ways of living.
I have often read books just because they were a good story. I also love the classics. This book falls half way between both of these for me. It is a quick read but leaves you thinking. I enjoyed it alot.
I read this when I was 13, and it was the first time that I had encountered the idea that the future might not always mean forward progress, that there may be a limit to how far humanity can go before we regress. This really, really got inside my head, and to some extent it has changed how I view the future.
For the past 6 years I have been searching for this book, unable to recall the title or author. Now I've finally connected the story I remember with this book, and am the happy owner of a copy. It's like having a piece of my history back.
This was a book I remembered reading as a child over 25 years ago, but had no recollection of finishing it, so I assumed I didn't. I have thought about it on and off since then and the Olympics this year reminded me of it and so I sought it out.
The prose is interesting and engaging. I had forgotten it was set in a postapocalytpic future and had it pegged as an historic novel.
I was glad I found it and glad to finish it although it didn't finish as expected which I loved about it.