In honor of St. Patrick's Day we bring you rich tradition of Irish Folklore. The following books draw their content from Irish myths.
Sixteen-year-old Kaye, who has been visited by faeries since childhood, discovers that she herself is a magical faerie creature with a special destiny.
Thirteen-year-old Tom, an unhappy foster child in Liverpool, falls into a massive open grave and is transported to Ireland in 1847, where he finds himself in the midst of the deadly potato famine.
Thirteen-year-old Jamie is overjoyed when a bequest sends him and his mother to live on an Irish isladnd, where he and his newfound friend Ramsay travel back in time to help a young girl save her people from certain death.
Seventeen-year-old Laurel returns to her grandparents' home in Ireland, where she encounters "the roly-poly man," a cluricaun who sets Laurel on a quest to free her twin sister, thought to be dead, to live with her lover in the legendary world of Faerie.
Fifteen-year-old Melkorka, an Irish princess, is kidnapped by Russian slave traders and not only learns how to survive but to challenge some of the brutality of her captors, who are fascinated by her apparent muteness and the possibility that she is enchanted.
On the day of an important music competition, talented by painfully introverted and nervous Deirdre Monaghan is helped to perform by the compelling and enigmatic Luke Dillon and finds herself inexorably drawn into the mysteries and dangers of the faerieworld.
Nineteen-year-old returning champion Sean Kendrick competes against Puck Connolly, the first girl ever to ride in the annual Scorpio Races, both trying to keep hold of their dangerous water horses long enough to make it to the finish line.
Irish teenager JJ Liddy discovers that time is leaking from his world into Tir na n'Og, the land of the faeries, and when he attempts to stop the leak, he finds out a lot about his family history, the music that he loves, and a crime his great-grandfather may or may not have committed.
In the late twenty-first century, dramatic climate change has made life in Ireland almost impossible, and soon Tir na n'Og is faced with a refugee problem, partly because of a warlord who is a member of the Liddy family.
No matter the title, they are all sure to please. Enjoy!