Beyond the Water Meadows

This title was previously available on NetGalley and is now archived.
Buy on Amazon Buy on Waterstones
*This page contains affiliate links, so we may earn a small commission when you make a purchase through links on our site at no additional cost to you.
Send NetGalley books directly to your Kindle or Kindle app

1
To read on a Kindle or Kindle app, please add kindle@netgalley.com as an approved email address to receive files in your Amazon account. Click here for step-by-step instructions.
2
Also find your Kindle email address within your Amazon account, and enter it here.
Pub Date 2 Apr 2021 | Archive Date 30 Apr 2021

Talking about this book? Use #BeyondtheWaterMeadows #NetGalley. More hashtag tips!


Description

Daisy lives happily in a care home with twelve other children, sheltered from a dangerous world of sickness and war. As everything finally returns to normal, she and her friends begin to explore the city beyond the Water Meadows where she has grown up. But while there are exciting new experiences, there are also people who are quick to take advantage of naive teenagers, to exploit them for their own financial gain. They are both cunning and ruthless, and it isn't long before Daisy and her friends find themselves threatened by them. 

Not only that, there is something mysterious about Daisy’s friend, Sophie, a comparatively recent arrival to the care home. Why will she never speak about her time before she arrived at Xunzi House? Why, when everyone else seems to be spreading their wings and enjoying their new freedoms, does Sophie seem to withdraw more and more? And why does she seem to be afraid of the world out beyond the Water Meadows? Is she, perhaps, right to be fearful - and if so, what does that mean for Daisy and her friends? 

For years the world has been a dangerous place, but at last the country is getting back to normal - or is it?

Daisy lives happily in a care home with twelve other children, sheltered from a dangerous world of sickness and war. As everything finally returns to normal, she and her friends begin to explore the...


A Note From the Publisher

Maggie Allder grew up in Cambridgeshire and studied in Winchester, Richmond (Virginia) and Reading, and taught for 36 years. She is a Quaker and a volunteer for the non-profit 'Human Writes' which befriends prisoners on American death rows through letter writing. She has previously written four other novels.

Maggie Allder grew up in Cambridgeshire and studied in Winchester, Richmond (Virginia) and Reading, and taught for 36 years. She is a Quaker and a volunteer for the non-profit 'Human...


Advance Praise

Reviews of A Vision Softly Creeping:

Maggie Allder's much anticipated third book in her trilogy, "A Vision Softly Creeping", comes with a surprising and satisfying narrator twist.

"A Vision Softly Creeping", like the first two books in the trilogy, is a stand-alone suspense thriller. If you haven't read "Courting Rendition" and "Living with the Leopard" - do so. All will enhance the others. - Amazon


Living With the Leopard:

'Living with the Leopard' is a double metaphor which you will get immense pleasure discovering. The tension builds with each page, each chapter...

Although 'Courting Rendition' and 'Living with the Leopard' are stand-alone thrillers, I, again, can't wait for Maggie Allder's third book in the trilogy. - Amazon


Courting Rendition:

Once I had started the book and really got through the first few chapters I was, in the overused phrase, “unable to put it down”. Setting the book just slightly in the future was a good idea as the scene was similar enough to today’s world but with the future setting to be relevant and believable if not frightening. This book deserves a mass audience. - Amazon

The Song of the Lost Boy:

I was given this book and have enjoyed all her novels, and feel her writing is now even more fluid and that she has developed a very readable and captivating style of writing. It is set in England in a post Brexit world, where UK has allied with USA, not really beneficial for many in the country. It focuses on one boy in a settlement – but I don’t want to say too much and give the plot away. The storyline shows insight into a possible future that I would struggle to be a part of – this is definitely worth a read! - Amazon

Reviews of A Vision Softly Creeping:

Maggie Allder's much anticipated third book in her trilogy, "A Vision Softly Creeping", comes with a surprising and satisfying narrator twist.

"A Vision Softly...


Available Editions

EDITION Ebook
ISBN 9781800469488
PRICE US$4.99 (USD)
PAGES 200

Average rating from 2 members


Featured Reviews

Thank you to NetGalley and Troubadour Publishing Ltd. for the arc of Beyond the Water Meadows.

How would the world be different if you had never ventured past your yard? If you knew nobody outside of your household? For Daisy this is her life. After four pandemics and years of lock downs, cultural revolutions, global warming, and the take over of the Chinese as a world power Daisy has never known a world outside Xunzi House, the care home where she lives. Now the world is changing and lock down is over, the children and teenagers are about to discover that there is a whole lot more of the world to explore and there are a lot more dangers in the world than just becoming sick.

Allder created a wonderful reimagining of our world if pandemics as well as other social issues continue. There is a lot about the world that could have been explained in deeper detail, and I would love a history book rather than vague notions from our narrator. What I enjoyed about this book is the timeliness and the parts where you could pick out very interesting pieces or little laugh points that have to do with our world today (rainbow pictures in a window of an abandoned house from the "first" pandemic and C-Pop that took me 3/4 of the book to realize was Covid-Pop). What made this book challenging was that it was sometimes told as if it was from Daisy as a 15 year old's perspective but sometime a much older Daisy would interject reminding the reader that it was all a memory.

Overall, a well written book that sucked me into the story and despite being slow moving at first the last half of the book flies by.

Was this review helpful?