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  1. 147,818 words (8 hours 58 minutes) with a reading ease of 70.5 (fairly easy) Fantasy; Description. The Water of the Wondrous Isles is a landmark in fantasy fiction. First published a year after Morris’s death in 1897 by Kelmscott Press—Morris’s own printing company—the novel follows Birdalone, a young girl who is stolen as a baby by a witch who takes her to serve in the woods of Evilshaw.

  2. 30 de dic. de 2019 · "Here ends The water of the wondrous isles, written by William Morris. It was printed at the Kelmscott Press, Upper Mall, Hammersmith, in the county of Middlesex, & finished on the first day of April, 1897.

  3. 29 de may. de 2016 · The copy of The Water of the Wondrous Isles recently acquired by the Graphic Arts Collection was once owned by Sydney Ansell Gimson (1860-1938), with a bookplate on the front pastedown designed by his brother Ernest Gimson (1864-1919). Primarily a furniture and wallpaper designer, Ernest was an early member of the Art-Workers’ Guild and the ...

  4. The Water of the Wondrous Isles is a landmark in fantasy fiction. First published a year after Morris’s death in 1897 by Kelmscott Press—Morris’s own printing company—the novel follows Birdalone, a young girl who is stolen as a baby by a witch who takes her to serve in the woods of Evilshaw.

  5. Longmans, Green, and Company, 1897 - Fiction - 553 pages. One of Morris' famous fantasy novels, €The Water of the Wondrous Isles was published by his Kelmscott Press in 1897, one year after the author's death. The novel tells the story of Birdalone, a young girl who is captured and raised as a slave to a witch in the fantasy realm of Evilshaw.

  6. 5 de oct. de 2016 · The Water of the Wondrous Isles is a fantasy novel by William Morris, perhaps the first writer of modern fantasy to unite an imaginary world with the element of the supernatural, and thus a precursor of much of present-day fantasy literature.[1]

    • Paperback
    • William Morris
  7. The Water of the Wondrous Isles. William Morris. Longmans, Green, and Company, 1897 - Fiction - 553 pages. The said town was hard on the borders of a wood which men held to be mighty great or maybe measureless; though few indeed had entered it and they that had brought back tales wild and confused thereof.