> Skip to content
  • Published: 27 February 2009
  • ISBN: 9781742285146
  • Imprint: Penguin eBooks
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 336

The Museum of Mary Child



Heloise lives with her godmother in an isolated cottage. Next door is a sinister museum dedicated to the memory of Mary Child. Visitors enter it with a smile and depart with fear in their eyes. One day, Heloise finds a doll under the floorboards. Against her godmother's wishes, she keeps it. And that's when the delicate truce between Heloise and her godmother begins to unravel . . . Heloise runs away. She journeys far, but one day she must return to uncover the secret at the heart of her being.
A timeless love story and a bewitching fairy tale from the masterful creator of Claire de Lune.

Visit betweenthelines.com.au - the destination for Young Adult books.
Find out more about the author at: cassandragolds.com.au

  • Published: 27 February 2009
  • ISBN: 9781742285146
  • Imprint: Penguin eBooks
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 336

About the author

Cassandra Golds

Cassandra Golds was born in Sydney and grew up reading Hans Christian Andersen, C.S. Lewis and Nicholas Stuart Gray over and over again – and writing her own stories as soon as she could hold a pen. Her first book, Michael and the Secret War, was accepted for publication when she was nineteen years old, and she has been writing a monthly cartoon serial, illustrated by Stephen Axelsen, for the New South Wales School Magazine for so many years now that she has got quite good at it. She wrote Clair-de-Lune after coming upon the fascinating fact that many people have difficulty in saying their own name without 'pulling back' their voice. She wrote The Mostly True Story of Matthew and Trim after seeing the bronze statue of Trim on the windowsill of the Mitchell Library in Sydney and thinking, for just a moment, that it was real. No one quite knows why she wrote The Museum of Mary Child, but her fans are glad she did. Born on the Horses' Birthday (August 1st), she once had a racehorse named after her which unfortunately drowned. She sings for a hobby, has owned a map of Narnia since she was ten, and would like to be an actor if she wasn't a writer -- but only if she could be in a production of Hair or Godspell. Her most recent novel is The Three Loves of Persimmon, winner of the 2011 Victorian Premier's Literary Award and shortlisted for the Prime Minister's Literary Awards, New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards and WA Premier's Literary Awards.

Also by Cassandra Golds

See all

Awards & recognition

Children's Book Committee Award (US)

Longlisted  •  2010  •  Best Children's Book of the Year

Prime Minister's Literary Award

Shortlisted  •  2010  •  Young Adult Fiction

CBCA Book of the Year Awards

Notable Book  •  2010  •  Younger Readers