Recommended children's booklists sorted by age or topic

Home > Books > Song of the Lioness: Alanna: The First Adventure

Song of the Lioness: Alanna: The First Adventure

Add to Favourites
Please login to bookmark Close

Book Synopsis

With brilliant new livery to celebrate the 40th anniversary of this ground-breaking fantasy series, Alanna the Lioness – the first woman knight – rides again.

Alanna of Trebond may be a girl of noble birth, but she will not be sentenced to the life of a well-mannered young lady. Alanna dreams of becoming a knight of the realm of Tortall, and neither her gender nor her father’s orders will stop her.

Though Alanna’s father is preparing her twin brother, Thom, for the path to knighthood, he dreams of studying sorcery. To forge their own destinies, the two hatch a cunning plan: Alanna will disguise herself as a boy and take Thom’s place while he learns the art of magic.

But the path to knighthood is never easy and, on her first adventure, Alanna will find friends and enemies, sickness and sorcery, and discover the magic within her…

Forty years on from first publication, The Song of the Lioness Quartet retains its warmth, adventure, and steel, affirming this coming-of-age tale as a timeless masterpiece.

Our Review Panel says...

11-year-old Alanna of Trebond dreams of becoming a knight, but like in all good adventure stories, her path is not easy. How can a girl become a knight? This is a book to pick up if you love swords, sorcery and very clever cats.

With themes of adventure, magic, bravery, identity and journeys.

This book is available on these booklists:

Song of the Lioness: Alanna: The First Adventure

Add to Favourites (0)
Please login to bookmark Close
song of the lioness alanna the first adventure

Book Details

Format:
Publisher:
Publish Date:

Visit our booklists on Amazon

Support independent Bookshops

Booklists you might also like...

Subscribe to our newsletter

Your Review

Stone Girl Bone Girl

review

Year group(s) the book is most suitable for:

Year group(s) the book is most suitable for:

Does the book contain anything that teachers would wish to know about before recommending in class (strong language, sensitive topics etc.)?

Does the book contain anything that teachers would wish to know about before recommending in class (strong language, sensitive topics etc.)?

Would you recommend the book for use in primary schools?

yes

Curriculum links (if relevant)

Curriculum links (if relevant)

Any other comments

Any other comments