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{{tropework}}
[[File:Sabriel.jpg|frame|[[Improbable Weapon User|Bells have never]] [[Musical Assassin|looked so awesome.]]]]
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{{quote|''"Does the walker choose the path, or the path the walker?"''|'''The Book of the Dead'''}}
|'''The Book of the Dead'''}}
 
{{quote|''"Your work?" asked the man, shivering a little, though it was no longer cold.''<br />
''"Yes," said Abhorsen. "I am a necromancer, but not of the common kind. Where others of the art raise the Dead, I lay them back to rest. And those that will not rest, I bind. Or try to. I am Abhorsen."''|'''Terciel,''' ''from the first chapter of '''Sabriel.'''''}}
|'''Terciel,''' ''from the first chapter of '''Sabriel.'''''}}
 
A young adult fantasy series by [[Garth Nix]] consisting of three volumes -- ''Sabriel'', ''Lirael'' and ''Abhorsen'' -- plus—plus at least one novelette, "Nicholas Sayre and the Creature in the Case" (appears in ''Across The Wall'', a collection of short fiction), a sequel of sorts to the trilogy. A prequel -- ''Clariel: The Lost Abhorsen'' -- and—and a sequel are set for 2013.
 
Set in a world sharply divided into the Old Kingdom, where magic rules, and the Southern Nations, where science is law, the Old Kingdom series revolves mostly around the conflict between two varieties of magic -- Chartermagic—Charter and Free, which correspond roughly to the traditional alignments of [[Order Versus Chaos|Law and Chaos]]. Charter magic is defined by the Charter, a runic language, which gives structure and purpose to sorcery to make it a beneficial and constructive force; Free magic is wild, uncontrolled and given to corruption and wanton destruction. Poised between the two is the Abhorsen, who partakes of both to defend the people of the Charter from the undead and other monsters that Free magic and its servants spawn in order to work their wills.
 
The first book tells the story of Sabriel, daughter of the Abhorsen, who discovers that since something bad has happened to her father, she must protect the world from the hordes of undead that threaten it. The second and third are set some years later and follow several other protagonists as they attempt to prevent [[Sealed Evil in Aa Can|a great evil from escaping its prison]].
 
Although parts of the setting bear a superficial similarity to the "stock" medieval fantasy, Nix quickly heads off into new territory, bringing a unique and different flavor to what might have otherwise been yet another fantasy [[Cliché Storm]]. The magic systems used in the book are radically different from the expected and contribute signficantly to its originality. One of the more interesting touches is the presence of the more advanced technological lands to the south of the Old Kingdom -- inKingdom—in particular Ancelstierre, home to many of the characters, which comes across much like England circa 1910-1920.
{{tropelist}}
* [[Afterlife Antechamber]]: Death is like a river running through a series of caves, the last of which opens out under what looks like, but isn't, a sky full of stars. That's as far as any character goes; anybody who goes on from there never comes back. Undead raised by necromancers are always souls from within the caves, either because they died recently and hadn't finished the journey or because they deliberately lingered in one of the caves in hope of finding a way back to the land of the living.
* [[Agent Scully]]: Nicholas Sayre thinks his best friend's obvious magic is [[You're Just Jealous|just showing off]], and other obvious signs of magic are [[Outgrown Such Silly Superstitions|superstition]].
** In Nick's defense, his brain was operating rationally on the subject {{spoiler|until Hedge planted a shard of the Destroyer's [[Sealed Evil in Aa Can|prison]] in his heart}}.
** Also, Nick admits to the existence of functional magic, having confronted and killed honest-to-god zombies, but he believes that there is a scientific explanation behind the usage of magic. Though when he is feverish, later on, he discounts many of the very real dangers of The Old Kingdom as superstition.
* [[Allergic to Evil]]: Free Magic has this effect on people, and broken Charter Stones induce extreme nausea in Charter mages.
* [[Always ChaoticExclusively Evil]]: The Dead, who even when not affiliated under a necromancer will kill anything that moves, if only to eat their life force. Being a walking and animated sin against the cosmic order will do that to a person.
** Free-willed Dead are more selfish and cowardy than anything else, willing to eat life force and kill people rather than truly die.
* [[Anarchy Is Chaos]]: Since the fall of the royal family, the Old Kingdom has been steadily sliding into chaos as the years go by, since the very existence of the family is necessary to the health of the kingdom.
* [[Apocalypse How]]: It's suggested that it happened north of the Wall two hundred years before the story opens, in response to Kerrigor's assassination of the royal family, and his armies of Dead ravaging the land. In ''Lirael'', Class 5, ''Planetary Extinction'', is the [[Sealed Evil in Aa Can]]'s goal.
** It succeeded at that goal six times before...
* [[Arc Words]]: "Does the walker choose the path, or the path the walker?"
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** Hell, anyone working at the Clayr's library pretty much has to be. [[Fridge Logic|Whose bright idea was it to lock up live Free Magic nasties in the basement, anyway?]]
*** They may not have been invited in the first place, they may have snuck in. Plus, not all of them can be dealt with by Clayr; the Stilken, for example, can only be killed with Free Magic, something no self-respecting Clayr is going to use even for a good cause, but it can be sealed using Charter Magic. The others might have been kept around as research subjects, then forgotten about. They should really either stop doing that, start putting them in slightly less stupid places, or start taking inventory every couple of decades to make sure nothing unpleasant gets out, but where would the fun be in that?
*** Or, as the Clayr can see the future and tend to plan ridiculously far ahead [[Fridge Brilliance|maybe they're kept there waiting for some important reason in the future,]]({{spoiler|like they did with the mirror for Lirael.}})
*** It's also stated that by living so much in the future they tend to forget the present. There may be a bit of '[[Somebody Else's Problem]]' mentality if they don't See themselves doing something about it.
*** The delay for categorising a new aquisition to the library is 50 years ''minimum''.
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* [[Call Back]]: At the very start of the first book, Sabriel's father sees to it that his (apparently) dead newborn daughter is baptized in the Charter, to preserve her spirit. At the very end of the last book, {{spoiler|the Disreputable Dog does the same thing for Nick, and sends him back to life.}}
* [[Call to Adventure]]: Sabriel gets hers when a messenger from her father delivers her the Abhorsen's sword and bells, a sign that something is wrong. Lirael's comes from the Clayr, seeing her on the Red Lake sometime during the coming summer (and in a way, the Disreputable Dog is a walking, talking [[Call to Adventure]].)
* [[The Call Put Me Onon Hold]]: Get used to it, Lirael.
** For the record, she did. And she feels better about being {{spoiler|the Abhorsen-in-Waiting}} than a reject Clayr.
* [[Catch Phrase]]: "Does the walker choose the path, or the path the walker?" for pretty much anyone associated with the Abhorsens.
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* [[Crowning Moment of Awesome]]: The Final Battle in "Abhorsen". {{spoiler|Mogget's reveal as Yrael just makes the last stand all the more epic.}}
* [[Crowning Moment of Heartwarming]]: Yrael's Choice.
** Also, "I love you. I hope you don't mind."
** And, {{spoiler|"I'm sending you back." "Wait - is that allowed?" "... No. But then, I am the ''Disreputable'' Dog."}}
* [[Cryptic Background Reference]]: There are all these hints thrown in around the wider world around and in the Old Kingdom.
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** In particular, ''nothing'' can resist the call of the Ninth Gate if it's their time to die.
* [[Deadpan Snarker]]: Mogget, in spades.
* [[Death Byby Childbirth]]: the first book opens with Sabriel's mother dying after giving birth to her.
* [[Derelict Graveyard]]: Sabriel, in the first book, lands her Paperwing in a very unique [[Derelict Graveyard]]: the underground and enchanted grotto full of the burial ships of kings. As such, there's nothing harmful lurking there, but she does find a [[Human Popsicle]] that needs rescuing while she's there.
* [[The Determinator]]: Frequently, it is Sabriel and Lirael's willpower that allows them to persevere against the forces of the Dead.
* [[Divided for Publication]]: Basically ''Lirael'' and ''Abhosen'' are one story, having been written as one story, but after getting past the half way point Garth Nix realised it was getting way, way too long for a single young-adult-aimed fantasy novel and split it in half.
* [[Does This Remind You of Anything?]]: There are two metallic hemispheres, explicitly described as denser than gold. Even when divided, they emenate harmful energy. When forced together, {{spoiler|they explode in blinding light, flash-incinerating everything within 10 miles and raising a towering, mushroom-shaped cloud}}...
* [[Don't Fear the Reaper]]: [[Famous Last Words|"Everyone and everything has a time to die."]]
* [[Doorstopper]]: ''Lirael'' is around 700 pages long. Since it was [[Divided for Publication]], along with ''Abhorsen'', the full story is over 1000 pages.
* [[The Dragon]]: Hedge in the third book. At first he appears to be the [[Big Bad]], but it turns out he... well, [[Eldritch Abomination|isn't]]. Chlorr is pretty much ''his'' Dragon, though.
* [[Eldritch Abomination]]: Most of the Free Magic beasties, with some of the more powerful Dead shading into it as well. {{spoiler|Orannis is somewhere between this and [[Planet Eater]].}}
* [[Embarrassing Nickname]]: Touchstone. Mogget gives him the name, and Touchstone finds it quite annoying, ([[As You Like It (Theatre)|it's a fool's name]]) -- yet [[My Greatest Failure|he can't argue with it.]]
* [[Mr. Fanservice]]: Touchstone, and his kilt. Squee.
* [[Eternal Recurrence]]: Lirael discovers in ''Abhorsen'' that the world has been destroyed and remade seven times in the past.<ref> Well, that or the Destroyer annihilated seven or so other planets before he got to theirs. It's not totally clear.</ref>
* [[Everyone Calls Him "Barkeep"]]: Sabriel was rather surprised to find out that Abhorsen was not actually her father's name, but instead his title.
* [[Evil Is Hammy]]: Kerrigor.
* [[Evil Is Not a Toy]]: Chlorr. "Oh, I hear there's an ancient and mysterious force of evil near the Red Lake! I shall go grab it, since there's obviously no way it could outclass me!"
* [[Evil Gloating]]: Played with (its a case of [[Evil Versus Evil]]) - after Yrael makes his [[Crowning Moment of Heartwarming]] choice, he proceeds to {{spoiler|tell the big bad, an omnicidal maniac who hates life, why. He does so in an incredibly poetic and smug way.}}
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* [[Get a Hold of Yourself, Man!]]: The Dog is prone to biting people who she feels [[Wangst|deserve it]].
* [[God Was My Co-Pilot]]: {{spoiler|The Disreputable Dog (Kibeth) and Mogget (Yrael)}}.
* [[Go Mad Fromfrom the Revelation]]: The Book of the Dead has a mechanism built in to prevent readers from remembering some of the less pleasant parts unless they need them, since otherwise they risk this.
* [[Great Big Book of Everything]]: The Book of the Dead.
* [[Great Wall]]: The wall separating Ancelstierre from the Old Kingdom. While it's actually a magical artifact designed to keep all manner of undead and magical nasties inside the Old Kingdom where they can be dealt with, it's not 100% effective, so the Ancelstierre side is reinforced with bunkers and trenches and permanent military installations.
* [[Happily Married]]: Eighteen years after their escapades in the first book, which caused many a Squee, {{spoiler|Sabriel and Touchstone}} are shown to be very satisfied together, while not verging into [[Sickeningly Sweethearts|mushy territory.]]
* [[Hellish Horse]]: Hedge has one. It is [[Incendiary Exponent|on fire]].
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** [[Fridge Logic]]: {{spoiler|What's Lirael besides someone to carry on the family line? Sabriel's own kids ended up being irrelevant to that bloodline anyways.}}
*** Well, the two obvious reasons are {{spoiler|A.)Garth Nix hadn't thought up Lirael yet B.) Lirael was barely a newborn baby at that time.}}
* [[Kid Withwith the Leash]]: Played with with Mogget. The Abhorsen has his leash, all right, but there's a very good reason they keep him on it.
* [[Kill It Withwith Fire]]: One of the ways of dealing with the Dead, especially those who aren't fazed by running water.
* [[Kill It Withwith Water]]: Nearly all of the Dead have trouble crossing running water; this is why the Abhorsen's House is built in the middle of a river, right above the edge of a waterfall, only reachable on foot by hopping across a series of rather precarious stepping stones. And if the Dead decide to lay siege... well, the river's fed by the Clayr's glacier, and the Abhorsens keep a block of ice in their basement for a reason.
* [[The Kingdom]]: [[Exactly What It Says Onon the Tin|The Old Kingdom]], capitol city: Belisaire.
* [[Lady of War]]: Sabriel in the later books.
* [[Laser-Guided Amnesia]]: Most of the stuff written in the Book of the Dead is forgotten the moment it is read, and [[The Call Left a Message|the reader only remembers when it is required]].
* [[Last Girl Wins|Last Boy Wins]]: For Lirael. She first encountered a visitor in the Clayr's Glacier, but was too depressed (and fourteen years old) to notice he was trying to ask her out. Then she met Sam, while he was busy running away and she was undertaking a voyage to find out what Hedge was up to {{spoiler|and Sam turned out to be her ''[[Squick|nephew]]'', so yeah}}. Last guy she meets? Nick Sayre. The series ends with the two obviously attracted to each other, but not actually dating yet.
* [[Lineage Comes From the Father]]:
** For Sabriel, {{spoiler|Lirael}} and Ellimere. However, averted with Sabriel's father -- hisfather—his aunt trained him -- andhim—and with Sam, who {{spoiler|inherits neither of his parents' [[Heroic Lineage|Heroic Lineages]]s}}, since Ellimere is the heiress to the throne {{spoiler|and Lirael is the Abhorsen-in-Waiting}}. {{spoiler|Luckily for Sam, he gets his own ability as a Wallmaker - the first in nearly a millennium.}}
** Also Averted with {{spoiler|Lirael's ability as a Remembrancer, that is, the ability to see into the past}}, something which can only come from being a child of {{spoiler|''both'' the Abhorsen and the Clayr}}.
* [[Long Lost Sibling]]: {{spoiler|Lirael is Sabriel's half-sister.}}
* [[Mad Oracle]]: The Clayr. An entire clan built of this. In most circumstances, their power of Sight is divided among the hundreds of Clayr, granting each of its members with random fragments of possible futures. This also gives them a rather incoherent sense of time and causality (which might help explain the number of one-night stands they have.)
* [[Magic Mirror]]: The Dark Mirror, a handheld portal into the past, only workable by Remembrancers. By walking into Death and reciting the incantation, the user can see into past events. The farther back one wants to look, the farther into Death she must walk.
* [[Magic Music]]: The necromancers' and Abhorsens' bells. Each of the seven -- namedseven—named for the creators of the Charter -- hasCharter—has a different effect. One of the bells casts the listeners deep into the realm of Death, but if you're appropriately skilled and/or powerful, you can just walk back.
* [[Magical Gesture]]: Charter Magic is done by drawing the signs on the air, with hands or with sword-tip. A diamond of protection is drawn with one's sword. And, of course, using the magical bells requires gestures (different ways of ringing will produce different effects), so this all crosses over into [[Ritual Magic]].
* [[Magical Girl]]: Technically, Sabriel and Lirael.
* [[Magical Library]]: The Library of the Clayr. It's carved out of glacier and is the largest repository of magic books and monsters around. It's keept in order by [[Crazy Prepared]] [[Magical Libarian|Magical Libarians]]s.
* [[Magic Versus Science]]: Magic tends to win.
{{quote| “Really, this is impossible!” the [[Muggles|doctor]] began, till a cold glance from one of the guards convinced him that his conversation was currently not required.}}
* [[Male Frontal Nudity]]: Touchstone, when Sabriel first meets him.
** And Nick, when Lirael first meets him. {{spoiler|In both cases, the pair end up a couple.}}
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** This troper always though Clair/Clare, which is a name which means ''clear'', like the Clayr's Sight (usually) and the pane of ice they focus their Sight onto to visually see the future.
*** That's because both suggestions have the same root - "clairvoyant" literally means "clear-seeing" in French.
* [[The Mind Is a Plaything of Thethe Body]]: Lirael can make skins that allow her to take on the form of an otter, or a bear, or an owl, but each one alters her temperament and perception for a while, even when she takes them off (the otter-skin gives her a great craving for fish, the bear-skin makes her extra irritable, and the owl-skin makes her more sensitive to light, for example.)
* [[Muggle Born of Mages]]:
** What Lirael initially believes herself to be, as a teenage Clayr who has yet to receive the Sight. {{spoiler|She's not. She doesn't get the Sight only because she inherited her ''father's'' abilities as a future Abhorsen.}}
** It seems at first like Sam is this, as his sister is clearly the future queen and he's pretty hopeless at his Abhorsen-in-Waiting training, {{spoiler|which we later find out is because Lirael is the true Abhorsen-in-Waiting.}} However, it's subverted at the end when we find out that {{spoiler|Sam has his own ability, as a Wallmaker}}.
* [[Naked Onon Arrival]]: Touchstone
* [[Names to Run Away From Really Fast]]: Astarael, the Sorrowful; also, the Weeper: If you hear it, you die.
** Also {{spoiler|Orannis, The Destroyer.}}
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* [[Omnicidal Maniac]]: {{spoiler|Orannis}}, and by extension, Hedge.
* [[One-Gender Race]]: Though there are ''some'' male Clayr, seemingly all of the named ones are women. They're also all blonde, willowy, and tanned. There is no plot reason why there ''shouldn't'' be many male Clayr, though. They're just not common.
** The Clayr take lovers from among the wider population of the Old Kingdom, but they don't wed or stay together; the men go back to their lives. It's possible that boys born to the Clayr are much less likely to have the Sight than girls, and un-Sighted boys are sent to live with their fathers. Though this seems like something Lirael would have noticed.
** Or they use their powers to pick a time when they will fall pregnant with a child which will be gifted, in the same way that Lirael's mother did.
* [[Orphan's Ordeal]]: In ''Sabriel'', Sabriel's father has vanished and sent her the Abhorsen's tools of the trade. She heads up to the Old Kingdom to investigate, and must come to terms with how little she really knows him, and {{spoiler|how she cannot save him.}}
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* [[Retcon]]: The waterfall which separates the first and second precincts of Death is described as "getting louder" when an entity passes through it from the second to the first precinct in ''Sabriel'', but in ''Lirael'' when an entity passing through causes the waterfall to go silent.
** The plot of the later books might qualify, as there's no reference to the {{spoiler|Bright Shiners}} or {{spoiler|Mogget's dual identity as Yrael}} in the first book.
** But there is [[Author's Saving Throw|an impediment on anyone's ability to talk about the Charter]] in the first book.
* [[Ritual Magic]]: Charter magic.
* [[Role Called]]: The titles of the three books taken together make an example of this: ''Sabriel, Lirael, Abhorsen.''
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* [[Royals Who Actually Do Something]]
* [[Save Both Worlds]]: Ancelstierre ends up at risk from both Kerrigor and {{spoiler|the Destroyer}}, and as the Abhorsen will probably tell you, [[The World Is Always Doomed]] in the Old Kingdom.
* [[Sealed Evil in Aa Can]]: Lots, ranging from the seriously dangerous to all but the very skilled to the World-Destroying God-Thing. The Clayr Library, for starters, keeps sets of tools lain out centuries ago for precisely the main character, as well as various Free Magic monsters and {{spoiler|an artifact capable of summoning one of the beings which created the world.}} And it's an effing ''library.''
** It is made clear that it's a rather unusual library. [[Badass Bookworm]] status is essentially required to work there.
*** In fact, Lirael gets an enchanted whistle that's basically there to call for help. The gist of the conversation: "What's the whistle for?" "In case you run into something."
*** It's positioned so you don't need your arms to blow it... in case something's holding your arms.
*** And then there's the regulation magical voice-activated clockwork mouse that runs back to the Reading Room and sounds the alarm in case you get into trouble and no-one is in earshot of the enchanted whistle...
* [[Sealed Evil in Aa Teddy Bear|Sealed Chaos In A Teddy Bear]]: {{spoiler|Mogget}}.
* [[Self-Fulfilling Prophecy]]: The Clayr ''live'' on these. They initiate new members into their ranks when they See themselves initiating her! Although presumably, their powers awake shortly after. And they do occasionally hand out jobs which haven't been forecast.
* [[Semi-Divine]]: Four of the Nine poured most of their power into mortal bloodlines; the Clayr, the Abhorsen, the royal family and the Wallmakers. Consequently, although not directly related to a deity, they all do have powers inherited from a god (or close enough).
* [[Servile Snarker]]: Mogget, since he's basically an enslaved {{spoiler|[[Eldritch Abomination]] of godlike power}} and does not appreciate the magic compelling him to always help the Abhorsens. Being [[Deadpan Snarker|completely]] [[Cats Are Mean|insufferable]] is his only way around it.
* [[Shout-Out]]: The job of Sabriel's family, Abhorsen, shares a name with the executioner in ''[[Measure for Measure (Theatre)|Measure for Measure]]''.
* [[Sociopathic Hero]]: Mogget toestoes—or -- or paws -- thepaws—the line between this and [[Hidden Agenda Villain]].
* [[The Soulsaver]]: Part of the Abhorsen's job description.
* [[Songs in Thethe Key of Lock]]: A shortcut to Abhorsen's House in ''Sabriel'' will only open to the sound of Mosrael, a bell which is otherwise never used in the series (it sends the ringer into Death.)
* [[Start of Darkness]]: The yet-to-be-released fourth book in the series will be about an Abhorsen named Clariel...{{spoiler|a.k.a. Chlorr.}}
* [[Strong Family Resemblance]]: Thanks to [[Superpowerful Genetics]], the Abhorsens are all Pale-Skinned Brunettes who get sunburned absurdly fast and the Clayr are all [[Darkskinned Blonde|Dark Skinned Blondes]] with a severe shortage of men.
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* [[They Do]]: Sabriel and Touchstone
* [[This Is Sparta]]: "Dig faster, for I...must...be...whole...again!"
* [[Top-Heavy Guy]]: Kerrigor. In ''Sabriel,'' his construct body is described as being ridiculously tall and barrel-chested, as though he was trying to remake his old self, but lacking "taste, memory, or skill." (How un-fabulous.)
* [[Took a Level Inin Badass]]: {{spoiler|In the novella, Nick}} fights an ancient Free Magic elemental and an army of evil shadow government agents with basically whatever's handy. {{spoiler|[[Word of God]] says that this story was intended to be something of a joke: Nick looks like a Badass by normal standards, but he faints during his failed attempt to poison the elemental, only to have Lirael (still a novice Abhorsen-in-Waiting) swoop in and defeat the creature with nothing but a thistle.}}
* [[Two-Part Trilogy]]: ''Lirael'' and ''Abhorsen'' were conceived of as one book.
* [[Unexplained Recovery]]: {{spoiler|The Dog bends the rules when it suits her, and it suited her to bring back Nick.}}
* [[Unstuck in Time]]: The Clayr live like this. See [[Mad Oracle]].
* [[Weakened Byby the Light]]: Lesser Dead creatures aren't so keen on traveling by day.
* [[What Do You Mean Its Not Symbolic]]: the "blue-hatted, blue-scarved" refugees the Ancelstierran government constantly screws over.
* [[Wham! Episode]]: The prologue to Abhorsen is an account of {{spoiler|the brutal assassination of Sabriel and Touchstone on foreign ground, using modern weaponry. They received very little screen time in ''Lirael'' and are only revealed to have survived a third of the way through ''Abhorsen'' (and the attack still killed all but one of the royal escort),}} making it especially shocking, particularly if reading the trilogy start to finish. {{spoiler|Their deaths are even more convincing due to a subtle perspective shift in the narration which falls just short of lying to the reader's face.}}
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[[Category:Young Adult Literature]]
[[Category:Australian Literature]]
[[Category:Old Kingdom{{PAGENAME}}]]