The Sky in Silver Lace: Text Classics by Robin Klein

The Sky in Silver Lace: Text Classics

Robin Klein
256 pages
Jan 1998
Paperback
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The Melling family has moved from Wilgawa to the city suburb of Lacey's Bay. There's a new school, a new place to live and new friends to make - this is exciting, but also terrifying, especially when the first potential friend Vivienne meets is large, bold and threatening.The Sky in Silver Lace is the third and final book in the Melling Sisters Trilogy, Robin Klein's humorous and heartwarming tale of four girls - Grace, Heather, Cathy and Vivienne - growing up in the Australia of the 1940s.Robin Klein was born 28 February 1936 in Kempsey, New South Wales into a family of nine children. Leaving school at age 15, Klein worked several jobs before becoming established as a writer, having her first story published at age 16. She would go on to write more than 40 books, including Hating Alison Ashley (adapted into a feature film starring Delta Goodrem in 2005) , Halfway Across the Galaxy and Turn Left (adapted into a television series for the Seven Network in 1992) , and Came Back to Show You I Could Fly (adapted into a film directed by Richard Lowenstein in 1993) .Klein's books are hugely celebrated, having won the CBCA Children's Book of the Year Award in both the Younger Readers and the Older Readers categories, as well as a Human Rights Award for Literature in 1989 for Came Back to Show You I Could Fly. Klein is widely considered one of Australia's most prolific and beloved YA authors.'A writer who relishes the drama of everyday life.'Guardian'All in the Blue Unclouded Weather, Dresses of Red and Gold and The Sky in Silver Lace are such wonderful, honest, Australian stories, still relevant to readers today. The sisters are a delight to read about, their adventures are entertaining and touching.' Bookish Manicurist'Robin Klein's novels are insightful, displaying anothertime when children and teenagers used their creativity, imagination andresourcefulness to cope without the material pleasures of today's technology.' ReadPlus'Klein's command of the language is masterful and her prose exquisite; welded out of poetically intricate descriptions, it displays a sprawling vocabulary and an overflowing arsenal of metaphors and images that convey precise impressions and moods ... there are passages that are almost sublime.' - Kirkus Reviews
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About this book
Pages 256
Published 1998
Readers 0