Skip to main content Skip to search Skip to search

Children's Fiction Europe

Dancing for Danger

A Meggy Tale

by (author) Margot Griffin

illustrated by P. John Burden

Publisher
Fitzhenry and Whiteside
Initial publish date
Sep 2000
Category
Europe
Recommended Age
9 to 11
Recommended Grade
4 to 6
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9780773761360
    Publish Date
    Sep 2000
    List Price
    $8.95

Classroom Resources

Where to buy it

Description

"Run, Dan, run! This may be the most important hide-and-seek game of our lives."

Danny tumbled. Meggy scooped him up and carried him to the tunnel-like entrance in the hawthorn hedge. She pulled her brother's back to her chest and told him to cover his face with his hands so the thorns wouldn't scratch him. As they trembled there, a rush of footsteps padded by. The sound was too soft for a soldier's boots. Meggy prayed that the owner of the footsteps would soon find a place to hide. She felt something warm on her hands. Blood was trickling down Danny's bare legs where the thorns had scratched them. Still, the hurt was smaller than what they would suffer if the soldiers caught them.

Meggy and Dan escape the notice of the soldiers " this time " but their hedge school is destroyed and they must find another secret place to learn. The English have outlawed the education of Irish Catholics and if they are caught learning, it would mean big trouble for both the children and their families. Meggy and her classmates find another place to learn, but if the soldiers find them again, they may not be so lucky. This is the first of a set of charming stories told with an Irish lilt, a hint of laughter, and sense of high adventure.

About the authors

Margot Griffin and John Burden previously collaborated on the first two books in the Meggy series, Dancing for Danger and Secret of the Crystal Cave.

Margot Griffin's profile page

Visual artist P. John Burden is a classically trained Canadian and British subject. Burden's work includes original acrylic paintings, watercolour paintings, and traditional and modern artist's prints. His art is symbolic or surrealist, using representational skills from a lifetime of drawing, painting, and design. John Burden also illustrates books for all ages and has work in collections worldwide.

P. John Burden's profile page

Editorial Reviews

Dancing for Danger, while providing a history lesson, is foremost a celebration of youthful initiative. On these pages, the children, especially Meggy, are the heroes.
- The London Free Press

...children will enjoy reading about Meggy's adventures, and the book would make an entertaining choice for historical-fiction assignments.
- School Library Journal

The story is extremely well written and readers will be caught up in the drama. I would most emphatically recommend this book . . .
-Classroom Resources

Margot Griffin, in this fast-paced, toe-tapping snapshot of the past, reminds us that history has much to say about the present.
- Patrick Dunne, Director of Education, London District Catholic School Board

Other titles by

Other titles by