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A summer of adventure with the Swallows and Amazons. The Walker and Blackett children survive a shipwreck, discover a secret valley and cave, and go on a thrilling mountain hike.

On summer holiday, the Swallows (John, Susan, Titty and Roger Walker) and the Amazons (Nancy and Peggy Blackett) meet up on Wild Cat Island. Unfortunately, though, the Amazons have a their Great Aunt Maria has come to visit and she demands that the Amazon pirates act like “young ladies.” Things get worse when the Swallows discover a very high hill that just begs to be climbed...

How the Amazons escape the Great Aunt, arrange a rendezvous, and mount an expedition to sleep under the stars on the summit makes a very exciting and satisfying story.

Friendship, resourcefulness, and sailing, Arthur Ransome’s Swallows and Amazons series has stood the test of time. More than just great stories, each one celebrates independence and initiative with a colorful, large cast of characters. Swallowdale (originally published in 1931) is the second title in the Swallows and Amazons series, books for children or grownups, anyone captivated by a world of adventure and imagination.

448 pages, Paperback

First published September 1, 1931

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1401 people want to read

About the author

Arthur Ransome

281 books277 followers
Arthur Michell Ransome (January 18, 1884 – June 3, 1967) was an English author and journalist. He was educated in Windermere and Rugby.

In 1902, Ransome abandoned a chemistry degree to become a publisher's office boy in London. He used this precarious existence to practice writing, producing several minor works before Bohemia in London (1907), a study of London's artistic scene and his first significant book.

An interest in folklore, together with a desire to escape an unhappy first marriage, led Ransome to St. Petersburg, where he was ideally placed to observe and report on the Russian Revolution. He knew many of the leading Bolsheviks, including Lenin, Radek, Trotsky and the latter's secretary, Evgenia Shvelpina. These contacts led to persistent but unproven accusations that he "spied" for both the Bolsheviks and Britain.

Ransome married Evgenia and returned to England in 1924. Settling in the Lake District, he spent the late 1920s as a foreign correspondent and highly-respected angling columnist for the Manchester Guardian, before settling down to write Swallows and Amazons and its successors.

Today Ransome is best known for his Swallows and Amazons series of novels, (1931 - 1947). All remain in print and have been widely translated.

Arthur Ransome died in June 1967 and is buried at Rusland in the Lake District.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 262 reviews
Profile Image for Tharindu Dissanayake.
309 reviews980 followers
December 13, 2020
"Aug. 11. 1931. We climbed Kanchenjunga."

"Shiver my timbers"
"Sh! You tame galoot."

Just when you start to think that the author had written everything he had in his mind the first book, Swallowdale will quickly make you realize that cannot be further from the truth. This second installment of the series is much more fun, and gets better in almost everyway compared to the original. Loved every little bit of it.

"We've just bathed. No Amazons yet. Wind south. Light. Sky clear. Now we are going to get the milk."

What surprised me the most was - even with the environs being more or less the same as Swallows and Amazons - how little repetition we find while continuing through this new journey, which is to be expected in a series like this. It was also great having the entire gang from before. I don't thing I speak for all when I say thins, but, Titty Walker and Nancy Blackett are becoming two of my favorites characters of all time. Now that Ransome has made it clear there's a lot more to come, can't wait to go through the third book (and the rest).

"We're all duffers sometimes, but it's only now and then that we get found out."

"When a think's done, it's done, and if it's not done right, do it differently next time. Worrying never made a sailor."

"Much better fun not knowing what was coming next."
Profile Image for Carol, She's so Novel ꧁꧂ .
964 reviews837 followers
December 28, 2025
There was nothing wrong with this book, other than it was a bit too long for it's subject matter (the adventurous young crews of the Swallow & Amazons boats having another adventure & dealing with the adults in their lives)

But I put it aside back in November & never went back to it.

DNF @55%.

Profile Image for Emily.
1,018 reviews187 followers
June 3, 2013
Update of May 2013:

Three years (give or take a couple months) is not really enough of a gap in between rereadings of a series I know as well as this one. Swallowdale in particular seems like it could benefit from lying fallow for a decade or so. But I suppose that in 2010 I just didn't dare to allow myself to foresee that my son would eventually appreciate having these read aloud to him, lest I jinx the chances of his liking these books which mean so much to me.

As was also the case in my recent reading aloud of Swallows and Amazons, I suspect Ransome of deliberately making the chapters before the appearance of the Amazons boring just to contrast how much livelier things are when they do show up. Three times during the Swallows' first day and evening on Wild Cat Island, we have scenes in which various Walkers are observing Swallow lying snug in a harbor whose perfections are also detailed each time. The system of the harbor markings is explained at least twice. One notices these things more, reading aloud. Of course in my loyalty, I want to say that Ransome is doing this by design, side-stepping the fact that he's not always the most sparkling of writers...


Review of July 9, 2010:

On rereading this book for the umpteenth time (although for the first time in many years) I just settled down with a happy sigh. How I love these books. This one is even better than Swallows and Amazons: longer, more eventful, and a shade more emotionally complex, but still with the same unrushed holiday pace in the leisurely unfolding of the story. I liked it better than ever.

Taking place in the summer immediately following the first book, it deals with two calamities that strike separate blows to the holiday adventure plans of the Swallows and their allies the Amazons. One I won't mention on account of not wanting to spoil the book -- but trust me, it's very exciting. The other is the arrival of the Amazons' Great Aunt Maria (the G.A.), a gorgon of an aunt who arrives at Beckfoot instituting a reign of terror involving best frocks, decorous behavior and punctual attendance at meals. Poor Captain Nancy! I relished this part of the book more than ever, and had the realization that as satisfactory as the ending of this book is, the real conclusion to the story of the Blacketts and their aunt doesn't come until the end of a much later book in the series The Picts and the Martyrs or Not Welcome at All.

Whereas the first book took place almost entirely on the lake, this one involves more of the country and people around it. The Swallows know the place better and are in turn known and liked, and consequently are more involved in the texture of the lives of the people around them, even as they continue with their independent adventuring, and are always "lurking" and hiding from the natives. I loved how virtually everybody the kids meet knows all about Aunt Maria Turner and how the cook at Beckfoot is on the verge of giving notice because of her.

Can't wait to continue my reread of the series, but will probably take a pause between books -- they're too good to be gulped down all at once.
Profile Image for Dannii Elle.
2,331 reviews1,831 followers
March 5, 2021
This is the second instalment in the Swallows and Amazons series.

For most of the year John, Susan, Titty, and Roger are siblings. For the duration of their summer holidays, however, they transform into Captain John, First Mate Susan, Able Seaman Titty, and the Ship's Boy Roger. They venture away from their summer dwelling in their sailing boat, Swallow, and camp upon Wildcat Island, at the centre of a nearby lake.

This year, however, their plans are scuppered early on, when wild winds thrust Swallow upon the rocks and sinks her to the bottom in moments. They quickly find their beloved boat can be saved, although much repair work must be done to allow her to fulfil her duties again, and their summer plans can also be salvaged, with the discovery of a new camping ground with nearby unexplored territory .

The early shipwreck meant the focus of this novel was less on sailing and more on navigating the land, instead. I found this just as intriguing as book one and enjoyed the adventures the foursome had, along with their friends and the Amazon sailing boat crew, Peggy and Nancy.

One especially sweet moment arrived at the summit of a perilous climb. Roger unearthed a buried box and inside a hand-written note revealed the names of the Amazon's uncle, mother, and deceased father, after one of their own childhood adventures thirty years previously. It was quite sorrowful to think, however, that modern-day children no longer experience adventures and unsupervised stretches of time like those featured in this series, so altered is the world now.
Profile Image for Allison Tebo.
Author 30 books468 followers
September 29, 2019
I read the first book in this series years ago and fell head-over-heels in love with it. My infatuation was so intense, that I felt downright repelled by any of the other books in the series. I have issues with sequels, and I was positive that no follow up novel could ever compare or measure up to the first novel. The first book was so marvelous, I just wanted it to keep going. I felt as broken-hearted and suspicious as the Swallows to discover that we wouldn’t be camping on Wildcat Island this summer. Like them, I was wounded and lost. How could this new adventure compare to the old one?

But that was the genius – this isn’t more of the same – this is something new. There is a slightly wilder, tangier feeling to this book than its predecessor. This time around, our young heroes are more likely to reenact ancient explorers or an adventurous band of thieves than pirates and sailors. And yet the spirit is still the same. It still has the same sturdy, British attitude and stiff upper lip spirit that make it as attractive as a warm fire.

Sometimes, a book that reminds me of my childhood ignites a wistfulness inside of me and makes me sad for the special time that can never be mine again.

But then there are some books that don’t just remind me of my childhood – I AM a child again when I am reading it. Time falls away and I am in that happy place once more, and when I close the book, there is no sadness or wistfulness, only pleasure and complete satisfaction because, for a little while, I got to go back.
Profile Image for Abigail.
7,972 reviews265 followers
February 15, 2020
The second in Arthur Ransome's classic series about a group of children (a few groups of children, really) and their holiday adventures in the great outdoors, this delightful novel is more than the equal of its predecessor, Swallows and Amazons . Opening as the four Swallows - the Walker children: Captain John, Mate Susan, Able-Seaman Titty, and Ship's Boy Roger - return to the lake, eager for another summer of sailing, Swallowdale soon shifts focus, as two catastrophes - one maritime, the other familial - prevent their complete reunion with their friendly ally-adversaries, the Amazons. Landlocked, and unable to spend much time with Captain Nancy and Mate Peggy, the Swallows confront a summer stripped of all the delights they had spent a year anticipating. Until, that is, Titty and Roger discover a secret valley - the beautiful Swallowdale - and another sort of adventure begins...

As with the first entry in the series, I was impressed by how engaging Ransome's narrative proved to be, given its leisurely pace, and lack of sensational incident. Everything that occurs - the discovery of Swallowdale, the Swallows camping out in their new valley stronghold, climbing Kanchenjunga (as they name a local peak), getting lost on a foggy moor - is realistically depicted. Despite that fact, or perhaps because of it, the reader is drawn into the story, following along with the adventures, enjoying the lovely descriptions, and taking the good-hearted, but wholly human children to heart.

I was also particularly struck, while reading Swallowdale, by Ransome's understated humor, which I found just to my taste. The scene in which the Swallows are horrified to witness the Amazons being forced to wear dresses, and drive out with their dreaded Great Aunt, was quite amusing, as was Roger's observation, while resident with Young Billy the charcoal burner, that dreaming of a certain kind of adventure was one thing, but living it quite another! All in all, a delightful second installment of a series I am now determined to finish. I think I may save the next for the winter, though...
Profile Image for Lightreads.
641 reviews594 followers
September 18, 2009
More 1930's kids camping/sailing/pirating adventures, this time with a shipwreck! And a cave! And a daring escape!

I think one of the things that's most charming about these books is that they're so detailed. It's not just, 'the Swallows made camp,' it's a five-page explanation of how their tents work, and how they built a fire, and how they made a broom from brush. The educational value is faded with time, but the charm hasn't.
Profile Image for Elizabeth.
1,582 reviews180 followers
March 24, 2024
A slow starter for me, but once it got going, I loved it! I loved this even more than Book 1 because of the friendship that already exists between the Amazons and Swallows and, of course, with Captain Flint. In this book, the Swallow is shipwrecked and the Swallows have to figure out how to spend the first 10 days of their holiday without their beloved sailboat. The adventures they get up to in their new camping spot are so delightful. The other major fly in the ointment is the Amazons’ dreaded Great Aunt has descended to the Blackett family home and insists on proper behavior from Nancy and Peggy and their poor uncle Jim, alias Captain Flint. Proper behavior from pirates?? Scrapes abound. 😂 I love the GA as an antagonist. We hardly ever meet her but she’s a menace nonetheless and the Amazons have to figure out how to elude her as much as possible. Great Aunts should only visit in term time, not in the school holidays!

I love the descriptions of the Lake District moors, fells, becks, tarns, etc. Though I despise camping for myself, I love reading all the details of the kids’ camping, especially about the food. I love their can of milk fresh from the cow and their tea time meals with cake and bunloaf. I love that the Natives keep them supplied with ginger cake, apple pies, and fudge. 😋
Profile Image for Christina DeVane.
432 reviews53 followers
September 19, 2020
This is a kid’s adventure book good for ages 8-12. There’s long, beautiful descriptions and lots of dialogue making for a long book. Story is slow and charming as the four kids sail their ship and explore the islands around them. There is a part where Titty tries to make a voodoo doll out of candle grease but of course it just melts in the fire. She’s trying to make the great aunt leave her friends’ house but it’s more humorous as she’s all worried thinking she burnt up the “GA” 😆 I haven’t read the first one since it wasn’t available at my library so it took a bit to figure out the characters. Definitely would recommend reading these in order!
Profile Image for Joan.
2,474 reviews
May 29, 2017
This is a classic from yesteryear. I do wish they would bring it back into print. Oh, there are some comments that are perhaps not entirely pc, but none that are particularly uncomfortable. The kids refer to the "natives" and how to avoid them but it is all fantasy. I certainly would have no qualms letting a child read this. The worst problem reaction is likely the same reaction I have had: now I really want to take sailing lessons! There are also comments that may need interpreting by Americans since these are very British upper class families. Although I was aware of the upper class family part more as an adult than as a child. The clues are the casual way they speak of "Cook" as though she was a part of the family and a mention of a housemaid. The baby also has "Nurse".

The Swallows have finally finished their school term (year) and are anxious to be back doing what they love: sailing and living on "their" island, Wild Cat Island, and sailing with their friends, the Amazons, two local girls. But nothing goes right. Their friends are stranded at home by a tyrannical nasty old fashioned Great Aunt who brought up their mother and Uncle Jim and assumes she still can rule the roost. Then the kids bash their boat, "Swallow" (as in the bird) on a partly submerged rock. They make the best of it and camp on land and have adventures with the Amazons in spite of the Great Aunt. What happens on these adventures and what did the Swallows discover that made a huge difference in their fun is just what you will have to read to find out. Start saving up money now for sailing lessons!
Profile Image for Eleanor.
136 reviews
October 12, 2013
I think this is definitely one of my favourites from the collection!!
I loved the adventures and outdoor challenges. But also the references to hills and lakes of the Lake District which I knew and recognized from family walks. Perhaps more significantly I really envied the Walkers and "Red caps" freedom to explore independently, without their families. It seems that parents were much more liberal with allowing their children to be independent in this period.
Profile Image for Eva.
90 reviews
September 26, 2014
I liked this one a little better than the first, perhaps because I have invested in the characters. My son is determined to get a sailboat now. This series and our recent sailing class have really sparked a passion for him.
Profile Image for Abigail Hartman.
Author 2 books48 followers
February 15, 2025
This was a very lovely listen (EXCEPT that the narrator literally yells when characters yell, and that had me constantly negotiating the volume). The story starts slow, though I appreciate another reviewer's observation that this might have been intentional: the "Swallows" become more exciting when the "Amazons" show up to add some zest to their adventures. Once the children become shipwrecked mariners, the story picks up, and it's thoroughly enjoyable to join them as they find a new campsite and a cave and climb a mountain and watch a hound chase and do all sorts of nostalgic-holiday-things. In reality, of course, I can't imagine letting kids of that age sail and camp on their own. AND I don't see how they don't starve, because they hike all over creation and then eat a couple of buns and some chocolate and consider that a good meal to sleep on (!). But I guess life was simpler in the 1930s?

It's been a good few years since I read the first book, and so I don't know whether it's my changed perspective or not, but this time around I found Susan the most relatable of the Walker children. I think John and Titty were probably Ransome's favorites, and it's certainly not hard to believe that Susan Pevensie, who gets such short shrift in the CHRONICLES OF NARNIA, was taken straight from Susan Walker: she's a bit less enthusiastic than the other children, more prone to "go native." But I actually loved how she made everything comfortable for everyone else with her practicality, how she was so good at making a fire and always knew what to do in a crisis, and how she still was willing to join in adventures and throw herself into the sailing with the others. Part of the story's charm is that all the children are different, but there's no real conflict or quarrels among them. (I admit I found Roger irritating, but that's probably accurate for an eight year old boy.) The piratical Blackett girls make a great contrast to the Walkers; Nancy, of course, is fun - a wild child who sails as well as John Walker if not better and who domineers everyone in sight - but she also struck me as tinged with sadness. I don't know if it was the narrator's performance or what, but Nancy was the only one who seemed to bring into the story a slight sense of melancholy. I'm not sure why that was.

Not every moment in the story was equally exciting (it's more fun when adults aren't around, I find), but there were some really great ones. (I even got into the final race!)
Profile Image for Rachel.
Author 26 books206 followers
June 22, 2022
Awwwwww. This book is just plain charming. Funny and exciting and real.

I read Swallowdale>/i> aloud with my kids over a few weeks, and we all enjoyed it so, so much! I think we may have liked it even better than Swallows and Amazons, which I read aloud to them last summer. We all agreed that we wish we could have had childhoods as uninhibited as these kids, sailing and fishing and hiking and getting into a little trouble now and then, but being resourceful and brave and getting out of trouble again without too much help from adults.

This series is such a delight that I'm tempted to read the next book aloud to them this summer too. I love how the kids in it aren't perfect and aren't horrible. They aren't unrealistically good at stuff, but neither are they hopelessly bad at it. They squabble and quibble and rescue each other and are just... absolutely awesome. I love them.
672 reviews1 follower
February 5, 2024
A continuation of the first book. There's a shipwreck in this one, which causes the kids' activities to be on land where they continue their camping, hiking, and exploring adventures. Both girls and boys can relate to these stories. Set in the 30's (before television), it's the children's unlimited imaginations that are the main ingredient to their play.

Ransome's stories are considered mundane by some. There are no fantastical superheroes, but simply the situation of not having parents around all the time and being allowed a huge degree of independence is a fantasy in itself. No safety gear to speak of is notably evident, i.e., first aid kit, insect repellent, sun block or sunglasses, even life jackets on the boats isn't mentioned, let alone the presence of a safety patrol. A compass, matches, rope, and a knife is about it for these kids. Talk about old fashion, but it also makes the books more fun to read.

Perhaps the childhood lifestyles of Ransome's generation are what helped develop their imaginative abilities. This seems evident by the number of children's authors who were publishing in the first half of the 20th century, producing many stories for and about young people, some still popular classics. Kids of yesteryear typically played with what was available and seemed to spend much more unstructured time outdoors. Several readers observe that the use of imagination and creativity seems to be lacking in today's youth by comparison. If so, it's likely due to the excessive media, toys, and organized/supervised activities that are constantly available, and kids probably don't have the time or motivation to look inward as much. I wonder if they even have much alone/down time in order to explore their own thoughts or interact closely with friends. It appears that from babyhood through grade 12 their agendas are filled up with day care, school, supplementary classes, parent interaction (quality time goals), ball games, and frequent family vacations—all spent in the company of adults wanting them occupied and safe.

I don’t know if today's childrearing priorities are better or worse for human development, but it’s certainly different from the old days. The Great Aunt who represents old-fashioned parenting is funny; constantly criticizing the children's upbringing compared to her day--just like we do. It's hard not to speculate about that while reading stories like Swallows and Amazons.

While reading, I didn't understand the numerous mentions of Peter Duck and what that was. Evidently, you need to read Peter Duck, #3 in the series, before this book to know, since it is actually #2 chronologically*. I'm curious if you can camp legally for free on the Lake District islands today. And if you do, I assume you couldn’t expect to have a whole island to yourself given the current hordes of vacationers.

*Later after reading Peter Duck -- the title is the name of the fictional character, a crusty old sailor who spins yarns from his years spent on sailing ships, who accompanies the children and their uncle on a Carribee adventure to find pirate treasure.
Profile Image for Tim.
Author 71 books2,685 followers
January 7, 2008
This is (I think) the third of the Swallows and Amazons series, with the second being Peter Duck, which I have not read.

I probably won't read more of these, but I did indeed love S&A and this one.

They are a rare breed, wonderfully summed by a quote on the jacket of the wonderful old Jonathan Cape edition I read. Eric Linklater, in the Observer, writing about Great Northern, another of Ransome's books, wrote "It is perhaps, Mr. Ransome's happiest gift to dress all his invention in good workmanlike clothes. He makes a tale of adventure a handbook to adventure."

The books are carefully constructed to teach. I learned useful tidbits about sailing, camping, and cooking.

(I've remarked elsewhere that I've seen this quality in Captain Marryat's Masterman Ready and in Cory Doctorow's forthcoming Little Brother. It is a real gift. Ransome does it effortlessly.)

The books also have a wonderful approach to encouraging the imaginative life of children. The wilful suspension of disbelief, the sudden fears, the desire for independence and competency, are given rare outlet.

There are elements that seem dated today -- for example, the complete trust of strangers (not to mention the willingness of a mother to allow her children to run truly wild at a young age.) Most dated, but in a charming way, are the sex roles of the children. The second child, Susan, is characterized as the "first mate" of the ship, and is always seen practicing for her adult role as wife and mother.

But the younger sister is still given rein to play at the adventurer, so the novels aren't overtly sexist, and quite frankly, I can see how modeling different adult roles in play is actually a good representation of how children act.

Overall, these books are charming. I recommend, nay encourage, them for all children of an age able to read them. In fact, I ran out and bought a copy for my godson immediately.
Profile Image for Nara.
240 reviews11 followers
June 5, 2007
Arthur Ransome's tales of British children out sailing in the Lake counties are just wonderful. Funny, quaint, perfect adventures, with the right amount of characterization, realism, whimsy, and imagination. I have re-read all of these as an adult, and they hold up to time; I can't wait to read them to my son when he's older.
Profile Image for Melody.
45 reviews2 followers
September 21, 2008
If you are looking for an easy yet intriguing read, then you've found them here. The whole series contain stories about four children and their imaginative travels...kind of like the chronicles of narnia but slightly more down to earth, and lots of fun. They made me laugh a lot, and helped me to see life a little bit more brightly.
Profile Image for Michele.
456 reviews
May 9, 2013
Again a book in a delicate condition with a 50p price tag. Oh so much value in a book with memories of previous readings and pleasure in the rereading and remembering forgotten pleasures.
This is why books should always be given as presents. Forget lego, xbox , cars, dolls. This is what remains with me and brings me undimmed delight.
Profile Image for Nick.
Author 21 books141 followers
August 21, 2017
No sophomore slump for Ransome. Book Two in the series is full of pitch and moment -- great aunts, the top of the world, wounded sailors and Long John Silver. Ransome keeps it humming along right up to the end, and the world he creates is both of the Lake District in the 1930s and full of timeless wonder about childhood, responsibility, and make believe as if your life depended on it.
Profile Image for Marina Sofia.
1,350 reviews287 followers
Read
August 25, 2016
A shame my children are not as hooked on this series as I used to be: yes, the pace is much slower than what they are used to nowadays in books and films, but surely the dream of exploration, adventure and minimal grown-up interference stays the same!
Profile Image for Kirsty.
2,792 reviews190 followers
July 13, 2017
Charming, exciting, well written, and a wonderful addition to the series. Swallowdale presents a rollickingly good adventure, with a host of realistic characters; it is sure to delight both children and adults like.
Profile Image for Brittany.
355 reviews4 followers
October 2, 2022
I didn't like this book as much as the first in the series... at first. I set it down early in the summer, not entranced enough to keep it at the top of my reading pile. Finally, when my pile shrank back down, I returned to this book, and gobbled up the remaining three-quarters of it.

This is a book for children, but I think the real magic is saved for adult readers. The reflecting on what childhood was like - in its purest, most seriously imaginative form - is such a sweet indulgence. The characters in this book are equal parts fictionally-perfect (almost no one argues or becomes impatient at all, ever) and relatable. Their humanness shows through even while they refrain from the ugly side of humanness. It's a beautiful rendering of children. And I think reading this makes me a better parent.
Profile Image for Ejayen.
497 reviews7 followers
May 30, 2021
I'm so glad I added this book to my collection. I loved rereading it. Much younger me was an idiot for not wanting to read this series. It is the absolute best.
Profile Image for Katie Fitzgerald.
Author 29 books253 followers
May 14, 2024
This review also appears on my blog, Read-at-Home Mom.

In this second book in the series, a year has passed since Swallows and Amazons, and the Walker children have returned to the Lake District for the summer holiday, excited to sail in Swallow, camp on Wildcat Island, and fight more wars with the Amazon pirates, Nancy and Peggy Blackett. There are some changes this year, though. For one thing, their younger sister Vicky has stopped resembling Queen Victoria, for whom she was nicknamed, and is now called Bridget. The family has also acquired a monkey, though he has not joined them on this trip, and a parrot, named Polly, who will serve as the ship’s parrot. They have also invented an imaginary explorer named Peter Duck, about whom Titty tells many exciting stories. What they are not prepared for, however, are the unexpected changes that impact their summer fun. The Blacketts have their great aunt staying with them, and she keeps the girls on such short leashes, they can hardly have any fun or free time at all. Then the Swallow suffers an unfortunate shipwreck, and the Swallows find themselves marooned on dry land while it gets fixed. But the Walker children are true explorers, and it doesn’t take long for them to settle a new camp, which they name Swallowdale, and to set out on a whole new set of adventures, including an ascent up the peak they call Kanchenjunga.

The first book in this series is so utterly brilliant, it would be impossible to top, but this sequel comes very close. Though at times early in the story Ransome’s thoughts seem somewhat disorganized, and his descriptions repetitive and lengthy, the story hardly suffers at all from these shortcomings. Rather, Ransome does a very good job of managing many story threads, and of breathing fresh life into the setting so thoroughly explored by Swallows and Amazons. I love the plotting of the story. Obviously, a new story in a familiar setting requires some changes, or the writing grows stale, but the way he chose to bring about those changes fits seamlessly into the overall narrative arc of the story and provides its own exciting shipwreck scene. Throughout the book, Ransome propels the story forward with one realistic and believable conflict after another, always resolving them happily but not without some anxiety on the part of characters and readers alike.

The characters also have a lot of room to grow during this story. Not only do we see a prim and proper side of the usually wild Blackett girls, we also see Roger beginning to mature and developing some exciting storylines of his own. Susan, too, develops beyond her role as mate, especially when she takes up native concerns on the behalf of her mother or another adult. The differences between outspoken and daring Nancy and the more cautious Swallows is also much more apparent in this book, and made me really consider how their friendship works, and why. I also thought the adult characters came to life much more strongly in this second book. Mrs. Walker and Captain Flint, in particular, developed personalities as people, not just as authority figures or family members.

This book, like its predecessor, empowers children to use their imaginations and explores the possibilities of a world where children can roam independently and look after themselves for certain lengths of time. Contemporary kids - especially in my urban community - probably haven’t done anything close to what John, Susan, Titty, and Roger do in these books, but I think every kid understands the desire for independence and relates to the power and enjoyment of imaginative play. These books appeal to all kids because they speak to their fundamental understanding of the world, and speak to their interests and concerns, instead of to the messages, lessons, and morals of adults.
Profile Image for Andrew.
702 reviews19 followers
November 6, 2021
Reading Ransome's second instalment of the Swallows and Amazons comes with a strong sense of his first novel opener: you already know the children, the lake, and the sense of perpetual holiday in their adventures. I never grew up with this series, I was into Professor Branestawm and Narnia, but a chap in the hall did, and adores them, and still reads them. Being a theatre type, he's adapted them into plays for Swallows lovers.

This time, there's a problem which forces them to adventure on land, but all major characters of their first adventure are in this. Though a moderately long book, before you know it you're half way through, so my hope of fitting in as many of the twelve novels as possible before I go might still stand a bit of a chance. I already have six of them - will need to hunt the others down in second-hand bookshops.

Ransome's storytelling involves a lot of secrecy, of the evocation of the secret places on the children's adventures - to store their stores, to bathe, to fish for trout, to keep look-out, to hide a row boat, to cross a walled country road unseen - that engenders the sense of thrill and hint of danger entrenched in our own memories of childhood. One of the best walks I ever took was with a friend across the fields in the north-west of my home town on one of the hottest summers in memory in the early Seventies. It was like entering a totally golden world, far away from civilisation, full of bird-spotting, trees, secret turns and wide open sky. It felt like stepping into the cover of the Ladybird book of What To Look For In Summer - or one of Ransome's adventures. All this comes flooding in at every intimation of secret spaces and places in the children's adventures across the moorland surrounding the lake. And is one of the reasons and justifications for reading them as an adult. The loss of the golden world can be briefly regained, this pastoral heritage very much at the heart of the romance.
Profile Image for Timothy Lawrence.
164 reviews15 followers
November 16, 2025
I wouldn't want it to *hurry*, per se – the gentle, low-key pace is part and parcel of the charm – but all the same, this felt overlong for the kind of book it is. I was definitely more taken with Swallows and Amazons.

Even so – Ransome continues to be a remarkable chronicler of childhood and the last chapter is especially lovely in its delicate combination of delight and wistfulness. Every time I finish one of these, it feels like coming to the end of a good, long summer vacation and growing up just a little bit more.
Profile Image for Ellen-Arwen Tristram.
Author 1 book75 followers
August 7, 2025
I had forgotten what a beautiful book this is. Sometimes when the world is hard, books make the perfect escapism, but sometimes even a book is too stressful! This has the perfect blend of low-stake peril, lovely characters, a fantastic setting... I can't fault it. I remember not enjoying this as much as the first in the series when I was a child, but I appreciate it in a different way now.

Ransome's writing style definitely changes between the two books, which is interesting; the sentences are longer and more convoluted (we were reading this aloud together), which makes it a tad harder, but it's all very immaterial. I love this book. It makes me want to be a child again - wistfully and sadly, but I love the characters enough that I could get past any low mood and just enjoy the journey.

While reading, we discovered that the Arthur Ransome Society appears to be alive and well; it's lovely to think there are other Ransome 'geeks' like us, and the possibility of sailing aboard a boat he once sailed it, named after one of his favourite characters... I haven't sailed for many years now, and I don't know if I will again, but this made me want to try. This book felt like medicine; I needed it.
Profile Image for Tim.
396 reviews9 followers
August 19, 2012
In my view better than the first. After holing their boat Swallow, the family camp on the moor in a valley above the lakeside woods whilst it's repaired.
The Blackets, part time female pirates due to the arrival of an Aunt at their home on whom attendance must be danced upon, join them as and when they can.
It's clear that in a way Ransome was particularly keen on the Titty character. In every book she assumes, at some point, a pivotal role. In fact it could be said that generally Ransome wrote his female characters better than the male. On only one occasion did John shine, in ' We didn't mean to go to sea ' whilst Titty, Nancy and later Dorothea all assumed important roles.
In most of the books, John was just there and Roger always seemed to lack part of his brain.
In later books Dick, Dorothea's twin brother showed up as the consistently intelligent and practical person ( was this Ransome writing himself in ? )
It wasn't until Ransome wrote the novels set in the Norfolk Broads with a predominantly male cast that men took the lead, although in ' The Big Six ' it could be said that Dorothea more than held her own.
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