

The Arrow Garden is a delicately-wrought tale of truth, selfhood, and acceptance, which transcends time in its lyrical exploration of what it means to live. To visit the past or the future, even in imagination, is to change it. Setting out on a hike to a mountain village shrine, away from the charred city, she begins a life to which she is not sure she is entitled, a life which feels like living on the other side of the sky. In wartime Tokyo, Tanaka Mie finds herself wandering the burned-out ruins of her dead parents' fire-bombed home with only hazy recollections of how she survived. Download for offline reading, highlight, bookmark or take notes while you read The Secrets of Greystone House. Please enter three or more letters to search.

Read this book using Google Play Books app on your PC, android, iOS devices. Read online the full version of the book «The Secrets of Greystone House» by Marcus Attwater, on the website or mobile application LitRes. They can be read in any order.When lonely and socially isolated translator, Gareth, takes up traditional Japanese archery in 1990s Bristol, he learns that to study Kyudo is to reach out, to another culture, another time, other people… But when one of them reaches back, two lives that should never have touched become strangely entangled. The Secrets of Greystone House - Ebook written by Marcus Attwater. It is part of the Tales of the Boundaries, a series of novellas exploring what happens when this and the otherworld meet. The Ruins of Cair Nynian is a story for everyone who has ever wondered what becomes of the children in fantasy adventures once they grow up. When he was eleven years old, Jack Riley spent two golden months at Greystone House. At the annual fancy dress ball in the Master's garden their two worlds briefly run together again, and both James and Alison have to choose a single future. The Secrets of Greystone House ebook (ePub). But she, too, has to deal with having a double past. James's sister Alison doesn't mind being back in England at all, especially not when she meets one of the theorising fellows students.


He misses his former life, and having his fellow students at the college of St Godfrey theorise about parallel universes and the nature of time doesn't really help. But for James Hastings the memories of his first adolescence in that other place are as vivid as his recent years in England, and a good deal more agreeable. By the time they are in their early twenties most people have forgotten the magical otherworld they knew as children, or have at least convinced themselves that it was wholly imaginary.
