8.8 /10 1 Votes8.8
Cover artist C. Walter Hodges Pages 189 Page count 189 | 4.4/5 Media type Print (Hardcover) Originally published 1966 Illustrator C. Walter Hodges | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Publication date 1966 (UK)July 1, 1967 (USA) Publishers Harcourt (USA), Constable & Robinson (UK) Similar The Eagle of the Ninth, The overland launch, Ransom for a knight, The Boar's Head Playhouse, Enter the whole army |
The Richleighs of Tantamount is a children’s historical novel written by British author Barbara Willard. It was originally published in the United Kingdom in 1966 by the publishers, Constable, before being published in the United States by Harcourt, Brace & World in June 1967. C. Walter Hodges drew the line illustrations and painted the cover portrait for the original edition.
Contents
Chapters
- To Be a Richleigh...
- Toy Sunday
- The Travellers
- The Arrival
- Tantamount
- Strangers on the Shore
- The Castaways
- Nancy and Dick
- The Wonderful Day
- Wreckers' Castle
- The Grand Idea
- Pursuit
- Home from the Sea
- An End...
- ...or a Beginning
Synopsis
The book tells the story of four young siblings—Edwin, Angeline, Sebastian and Maud—who live together in a London mansion in Victorian society (c. the 1870s), along with their wealthy parents. These four children have been longing all their lives for their maiden visit to Tantamount, a castle on the Cornish coast, built by their great-great-great-grandfather. From time to time, the children wonder about its mysterious past as they look at the gigantic painting of the castle that dominates a wall in their drawing room.
Their lives are changed one fateful, unforgettable July when their father contracts a serious illness. The children are sent to stay at the castle while their parents go on a sea voyage to repair his health. Only when the children begin to explore do they realize that despite being built and furnished in magnificent style, the castle is suffering from decades of neglect. The tutor and governess are shocked by the condition of the place and leave abruptly. Soon the recently engaged servants do the same, but the children decide to stay on alone.
Regarding themselves as castaways, they enjoy their freedom despite the hardships. They make friends with two local children, Nancy and Dick, and are worried when they disappear. They begin to suspect that the castle is being used for smuggling and even wrecking. Tantamount is destroyed by fire, but when the parents arrive at last they are relieved to find their children have survived.