Troll Mill

Troll Mill

by Katherine Langrish
Troll Mill

Troll Mill

by Katherine Langrish

Paperback(UK ed.)

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Overview

Sequel to the highly-acclaimed Troll Fell, this is just as exciting, dramatic and atmospheric. But watch out! You never know what sneaky creatures are lurking in the shadows of Troll Mill, waiting to jump out at you...

"With a piercing squeal - with an anguished wooden groan - with a roar of muffled waters - Troll Mill woke from its sleep..."

For three years Troll Mill has stood empty, and Peer Ulfsson has found a home with his friend Hilde. But in the shadows of eerie Troll Fell, surrounded by sly and mischievous creatures, life doesn't remain peaceful for long...

Returning from a hard day's fishing, and with a violent storm brewing, Peer watches horror-struck as his friend Kersten rushes to the shore - thrusting her young baby into his arms - and throws herself into the sea. Struggling home with the baby, Peer passes the old mill, once owned by his wicked uncles, and sees the millwheel turning! But it has been derelict for years... Who or what could be lurking in the shadows?

This exciting, atmospheric novel from rising star, Katherine Langrish, mixes adventure with folklore monsters to create a brilliantly creepy sequel to Troll Fell.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780007170753
Publisher: HarperCollins Children's Books
Publication date: 10/02/2006
Edition description: UK ed.
Pages: 338
Sales rank: 673,532
Product dimensions: 5.00(w) x 8.00(h) x 0.84(d)
Age Range: 10 - 13 Years

About the Author

Katherine Langrish is the author of Troll Fell, a New York Public Library "One Hundred Titles for Reading and Sharing" book; Troll Mill, a New York Public Library Book for the Teen Age; and Troll Blood. She grew up in the Yorkshire Dales, the hill country of northern England. She graduated with an honors degree in English from the University of London and has been writing stories for most of her life. Katherine currently lives in England with her husband and two daughters.

Read an Excerpt

Troll Mill


By Katherine Langrish

HarperCollins Publishers, Inc.

Copyright © 2006 Katherine Langrish
All right reserved.

ISBN: 0060583088

Chapter One

What Happened on the Shore

The boat danced clumsily in from the fishing grounds, dipping and rolling over lively waves at the mouth of the fjord. Her crew, a man and a boy, reached steadily forward and back, tugging their two pairs of oars through the choppy water.

The boy, rowing in the bows, looked up over his companion's bent back. Out west beyond the islands, the wind tore a long yellow rift in the clouds, and the setting sun blinked through in stormy brilliance, splashing the water with fiery oils.

Dazzled, the boy missed his next stroke, slicing the oars through air instead of water. Braced to pull, he flew backward off his seat into a tangle of nets and creels and a slither of fat, bright fish. He lay breathless as the boat heaved under his spine, hurling him skyward, then sinking away underneath as though falling through space.

"Resting?" teased his friend Bjorn. "Had enough rowing for one day?"

Peer laughed back from the bottom of the boat, his long arms and legs sprawling. "Yes, I'm tired. I think I'll just stay here. Ouch!" Salt water slapped his face as the prow cut through a wave, and he scrambled up hastily with dripping hair, snatching at the loose oars.

"I'll take us in," said Bjorn over his shoulder. He leaned on his own pair of oars, and Peer knelt, clutching the slender bows, looking forward at the land. The water under the boat lit up a cloudy green; over on the shore the pebbles glittered, and the sea-grass on the dunes glowed gold. The late sunlight turned the slanting pastures above the village into slopes of emerald. High above all, the rugged peak of Troll Fell shone as if gilded against a sky dark as a bruise.

"Bad weather coming," said Bjorn, squinting at the sunset. The breeze stiffened, carrying cold points of rain. "But we'll get home before it catches us."

"Maybe you will," Peer said. "I'll get soaked on my way up the hill."

"Stay with us," offered Bjorn. "Kersten would love to see you. You can earn your supper by admiring the baby." He glanced around, smiling at Peer's sudden silence. "Come on. Surely you've got used to babies with little Eirik to practice on up at the farm? How old is he now?"

Peer calculated. "He was born last seedtime, just after Grandfather Eirik died, so . . . about a year. He certainly keeps Gudrun and Hilde busy. He's into everything."

"He's a fine little fellow, isn't he? It's sad his grandpa never saw him."

"Yes . . . although actually," said Peer, "I think he might have lost patience with the noise. Dear old Eirik, he was always grumbling, 'A poet needs peace and quiet!' Little Eirik screams such a lot. Babies! I never knew they were so much trouble."

"Ours is a good little soul," Bjorn said proudly. "Never cries."

"And how is Kersten?" Peer asked, his eye on the shore as they ran in past lines of black rocks. He crouched, tensing. Bjorn pulled a couple of hard strokes on one oar to straighten up.

"She's fine, thanks," he grunted, twisting around as the boat shot in on the back of a breaking wave. The keel knocked on the shingle, and Peer sprang out into a welter of froth and seaweed. Bjorn followed and together they ran the boat higher up the stony beach.

"That was a good day's work!" said Bjorn. "Glad Ralf could spare you."

"I've been helping him plough," Peer explained, "but we've got the seed in now and lambing's nearly over. So he said I deserved a holiday."

"It's been nice to have your company." Reaching into the boat, Bjorn hooked his fingers into the gills of a heavy, shining cod and hefted it. "There's plenty of eating on that one. Take it back with you." He handed it over. "Or will you stay?"

Cradling the fish awkwardly, Peer glanced around. The brief sunset flare was over. The rising wind whipped strands of sea-stiffened fair hair across his face. Loose swirls of cloud were descending over Troll Fell. The fjord disappeared under a gray sea fret, and restless waves slapped jerkily against the rocks.

"I'll stay," he decided. "Ralf and Gudrun won't be worried, they know I'm with you." Absurdly, he hugged the fish, smiling. Three years ago he'd been a friendless orphan, and he could still hardly believe that he now had a family who cared about him.

"Good choice!" said Bjorn cheerfully. "We'll ask Kersten to fry that fish for us, then, and we'll have it with lots of warm bread and hot sizzling butter. Are you hungry?"

"Starving." Peer licked his lips.

Bjorn laughed. "Then hurry! Go on ahead while I finish up here. Off with you! Here comes the wet."

Cold, stinging rain swept across the beach as he spoke, darkening the stones. It drove into Peer's face as he dashed across the clattering shingle, dodging boulders and jumping over inlets where the tide swirled and sloshed. It was fun, pitting himself against the weather. Soon he came to the channel where the stream ran down to the sea. Beside it, the path to the village wound up through the sand dunes.

Rain scythed through the long wiry grass, switching Peer's skin and soaking through his clothes in cold patches. Tiring, he slowed to a plod, looking forward to sitting snugly by the fire and chatting with Kersten while she cooked. The fish was a nuisance to carry though, slippery and unwieldy. He nearly dropped it and stopped to hoist it up. It slithered through his arms. He tried to shove it inside his jacket, but the head and tail stuck out. Wet and shivering, he began to laugh.

This is silly, he thought, I'm nearly juggling. What I need is a piece of string, or maybe a stick to skewer it on. I . . . what's that?

Continues...


Excerpted from Troll Mill by Katherine Langrish Copyright © 2006 by Katherine Langrish. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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