logo
Wrong email address or username
Wrong email address or username
Incorrect verification code

A Swiftly Tilting Planet - Community Reviews back

by Madeleine L'Engle
sort by language
My only books were women's looks
My only books were women's looks rated it 13 years ago
On Thanksgiving Day, The Murray Family gets a phone call from the President warning them that nuclear war is eminent. In a tiny South American country called Vespugia, vicious dictator nicknamed Mad Dog Branzillo sits poised with his finger on the button. Meg's mother in-law, the reclusive Mrs. O'Ke...
Book.Blog.Bake.
Book.Blog.Bake. rated it 14 years ago
This is one of the least popular books that follow A Wrinkle in Time, but ti's my favorite. I'm a sucker for time travel, I suppose. Charles Wallace is a much more interesting character here than he ever was in A Wind in the Door. I enjoy the way all the stories tie together and it's nice to see a g...
thomcat
thomcat rated it 15 years ago
The most enjoyable of the series so far for me. I wish I had read this when it came out!
Melody Murray's Books
Melody Murray's Books rated it 15 years ago
I was so scared, growing up. This is one of the books I clutched to my heart like a lifeline.So the plot's absurd, the dialogue stilted and the unicorn laughable. I don't care any more now than I did then. The core message is that there's hope- and that hope can come from the most unlikely sources. ...
Lillie Loves to Read
Lillie Loves to Read rated it 15 years ago
Revisiting the Murray & O'Keefe bunch. Fun to books to reread.
Tower of Iron Will
Tower of Iron Will rated it 15 years ago
I read this about thirty years ago and I don't recall that much about it, but I could probably recite Charles Wallace's prayer/spell poem thing from memory.
NinthWanderer
NinthWanderer rated it 16 years ago
This was as far as I read into this series. I read this book several times, enjoying the way it played with time and history.
The Review Man
The Review Man rated it 19 years ago
I did not enjoy Planet—it is pointlessly dense and features a largely irrelevant plot. Any of A Wrinkle in Time's charm is completely lost here, and time travel to the past is about as stale a plot device as they come. (It's also quite likely to be impossible for reasons outlined by Stephen Hawking....
willemite
willemite rated it 22 years ago
Although I loved the first and liked the 2nd a lot, it was starting to wear thin by book three.
Need help?