Magic Tree House
Magic Tree House is an American series of children's books written by the American author Mary Pope Osborne. The original American series was illustrated by Salvatore Murdocca until 2016, after which AG Ford took over . Other illustrators have been used for foreign-language editions.
Author | Mary Pope Osborne |
---|---|
Illustrator | Salvatore Murdocca (US) Ayana Amako (Japan) |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Genre | Children's historical fantasy |
Publisher | Random House (US) Media Factory (Japan) |
The series consists of two groups. The first group consists of books 1–28, in which Morgan Le Fay sends Jack and Annie Smith, two normal children who are siblings from the fictional small town of Frog Creek, Pennsylvania, on numerous adventures and missions with a magical tree house. The second group, referred to as the Magic Tree House: Merlin Missions, begins with book 29, Christmas in Camelot. In Merlin Missions, Jack and Annie are given quests by the ancient wizard Merlin the Magician. These books are longer than the previous 28, and some take place in fantasy realms like Camelot. Kathleen and Teddy are two apprentices who befriend Jack and Annie during their adventures; on one of these adventures they free Kathleen from a spell. The two occasionally join Jack and Annie, and, when they don't, provide them support instead. During Super Edition #1, Teddy sends them on a mission instead of Morgan or Merlin. The companion Magic Tree House Fact Trackers are co-written by Mary Pope Osborne with her husband Will Osborne or her sister Natalie Pope Boyce.
In the early books, Morgan is the only one sending the children on missions. Beginning with book 29, the role of sender is switched to Merlin. About 10 years after book 29, in 2014, Morgan becomes the sender again, and these books are shorter than the ones that immediately preceded them. In addition to the books listed below, Mary Pope Osborne appears to still be writing the series, having released "#37 Rhinos at Recess" and "#38 Time of the Turtle King" in 2023.
Series background
After graduating college, Osborne and a friend went traveling.[1] Osborne spent time in Crete and traveled through Iraq, Iran, India, Afghanistan, Turkey, Lebanon, Syria, and Pakistan.[2] The trip came to an end when Osborne experienced blood poisoning in Nepal requiring her to stay in a hospital for a couple of weeks where she read The Lord of the Rings.[1] Remarking on her travels Osborne said, "That journey irrevocably changed me. The experience gathered serves as a reference point every day of my life. I encountered worlds of light and worlds of darkness — and planted seeds of the imagination that led directly to my being an author of children's books."[2]
Osborne's travels and experiences have factored largely into her own writing, while her writing has allowed her to experience some of the thrills of traveling. As she said, "Without even leaving my home, I’ve traveled around the globe, learning about the religions of the world."[3]
Osborne's writing career began "one day, out of the blue"[3] when she wrote Run, Run As Fast As You Can in 1982. The book itself is semi-autobiographical in nature, according to Osborne: "The girl was a lot like me and many of the incidents in the story were similar to happenings in my childhood."[3] The book served as the starting point for Osborne's writing career. Her early work received mixed reviews.[4][5] Her work includes young adult novels, picture books, retellings of mythology and fairy tales, biographies, mysteries, a six-part series of the Odyssey, a book of American Tall Tales, and a book for young readers about the major world religions.
The idea for the Magic Tree House series came when Penguin Random House asked Osborne to start writing a series of children's books.[6] From the beginning Osborne knew she wanted to include time travel.[6] The idea for the treehouse being the time-travel inducing object only came to her when she and her husband saw one on a walk through the forest in Pennsylvania.[6]
Osborne says that she can work on Magic Tree House up to 12 hours a day and seven days a week[7] and has used space at shared office space, The Writer's Room.[8] She has modeled her writing after Hemingway by trying to be simple and direct[7] and is "noted for writing clear, lively, well-paced prose in both her stories and her informational books."[2]
Main characters
When Osborne started writing the series she wrote Jack as a main character and added Annie as a typical annoying younger sister.[9] After writing her in, Osborne eventually decided to add Annie in as another main character.[9] Osborne highlights Annie’s bravery as a characteristic to serve as a main difference between Annie and herself, as Osborne has noted that she often wished she were braver than she was.[9]
Jack
Jack is the older brother who is known for his love of books and learning, an attribute Osborne says connects her to the character.[10] Jack has a tendency to be cautious in his approach.[11] According to the original illustrations by Sal Murdocca, Jack is pictured with brown hair, red glasses, and is taller than Annie.[12]
Repetition
The repetition in the books is one quality that makes the series easier for younger readers to understand.[13] Each book includes Jack and Annie traveling to some time or place via their magic treehouse to solve a mystery.[14] The objective of their mission is often clear and usually involves collecting an object or meeting a specific person of historical importance.[15]
Repetition also occurs in the actual writing of the books. The sentences, “The wind started to blow. The tree house started to spin. It spun faster and faster. Then everything was still. Absolutely still” occur in at least 32 of the ‘Magic Tree House’ books as of 2005.[9]
Repetition is known to make learning to read easier, as kids get to practice seeing and hearing the same sentences until they are comfortable with them.[13]
Legacy
Mary Pope Osborne's books have been named to a number of the Best Books of the Year Lists, including, School Library Journal, Parents’ Magazine, The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books, and Bank Street College of Education.[2] She has received honors from such organizations as the National Council of Teachers of English, The Children's Book Council, and the International Reading Association.[2] She received the 1992 Diamond State Reading Association Award,[2] 2005 Ludington Memorial Award from the Educational Paperback Association[16] and the 2010 Heidelberger Leander Award.[17] She has also received awards from the Carolina Alumni Association,[18] the Virginia Library Association[2] and in spring 2013 she was awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Letters from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.[19]
Osborne served two separate terms as president of the Authors Guild and also chaired its Children's Book Committee.[2] She has since traveled extensively in the states and throughout the world, visiting schools and speaking on issues related to reading and books. In 2011, she attended the Tokyo International Film Festival for the premiere of the Magic Tree House anime film and visited schools in the tsunami-hit area of Japan.[20] The film grossed 5.7 million dollars; Osborne donated all her proceeds into her educational works.[21]
She was profiled on NBC's Rock Center with Brian Williams for her continued efforts to get books into the hands of underserved children on a Magic Tree House-themed tour bus.[21] She spoke of the pressure she feels as an author that children look up to, "for a child to value someone who writes books is so extraordinary."[21]
To celebrate the 20th anniversary of the Magic Tree House series in 2012, Osborne created a Magic Tree House Classroom Adventures Program. Osborne's mission with Classroom Adventures is to inspire children to read and to love reading[22] while simultaneously helping kids to read at grade level by the end of 3rd grade.[21] Free of charge, the program provides a set of online educational resources for teachers and allows for Title 1 schools to apply for free Magic Tree House books.[22] Under Classroom Adventures, Osborne, in partnership with the First Book organization in Washington, D.C., has donated hundreds of thousands of Magic Tree House books to underserved schools.[23]
Adaptations
Magic Tree House Children's Theatre
The Magic Tree House brand has taken on other forms. A full-scale musical adaptation was created by Will Osborne and Randy Court; Magic Tree House: The Musical, premiered in September 2007.[24] Osborne hoped that it would have the same kind of kid and adult appeal as The Lion King or Mary Poppins.[24] Based on the Magic Tree House book Christmas in Camelot, the Musical has toured nationally[24][25] and had a cast album.[26]
A planetarium show; Magic Tree House: Space Mission, also created by Will Osborne, is produced and presented exclusively at the Morehead Planetarium in Chapel Hill, North Carolina.[27]
In 2011, Will Osborne collaborated with New Orleans composer Allen Toussaint and Ain't Misbehavin' co-creator Murray Horwitz to write A Night in New Orleans, a musical adaptation of Magic Tree House #42: A Good Night for Ghosts about the life of Louis Armstrong. The show features an ensemble cast and live jazz band. It premiered in 2012 at the New Jersey Performing Arts Center and was shown free to every Newark 4th grade student.[28]
Magic Tree House Kids Shows are theatrical adaptations of selected titles in the Magic Tree House series designed specifically for performance by kids.[29] To date, children's shows have been created by husband and wife playwright and composer team Randy Courts and Jenny Laird[30] in collaboration with Will Osborne based on the following Magic Tree House books: Dinosaurs Before Dark, The Knight at Dawn, Pirates Past Noon, A Ghost Tale for Christmas Time,[30] A Night in New Orleans, and Stage Fright on a Summer Night, a new children's show based on the life of William Shakespeare, set to premiere at the Orlando Shakespeare Theatre in October 2017.[25]
Film adaptation
The animated film Magic Tree House (マジック・ツリーハウス), produced by Media Factory, premiered in Japan in October 2011[31] and was generally released there on January 7, 2012.[32]
List of Magic Tree House books
According to its official website, Magic Tree House books are for beginning chapter book readers.[33]
Main series
Arc | Number | Title | First printed | Companion book |
---|---|---|---|---|
The Mystery of the Magic Tree House (#1) | #1 | Dinosaurs Before Dark (UK Title: Valley of the Dinosaurs) | July 28, 1992 | #1, Dinosaurs |
Plot: Jack and Annie discover the tree house and, using the magical books there, they unwittingly travel back to the late Cretaceous period (65 million years ago) where they meet a Pteranodon that saves them from a Tyrannosaurus rex. Jack finds a gold medallion with the letter "M" on it. | ||||
The Mystery of the Magic Tree House (#2) | #2 | The Knight at Dawn (UK title: Castle of Mystery) | February 16, 1993 | #2, Knights and Castles |
Plot: In England during the Middle Ages, Jack and Annie explore a castle and meet a brave knight. | ||||
The Mystery of the Magic Tree House (#3) | #3 | Mummies in the Morning (UK title: Secret of the Pyramid) | August 24, 1993 | #3, Mummies and Pyramids |
Plot: In Ancient Egypt, Jack and Annie help the ghost of Queen Hutepi find her missing Book of the Dead. | ||||
The Mystery of the Magic Tree House (#4) | #4 | Pirates Past Noon (UK title: Pirates' Treasure!) | March 8, 1994 | #4, Pirates |
Plot: Jack and Annie encounter some pirates in the Caribbean Sea and meet Morgan le Fay, who turns out to be the mysterious "M". | ||||
The Mystery of the Magic Spell (#1) | #5 | Night of the Ninjas | March 21, 1995 | #30, Ninjas and Samurai |
Plot: Morgan le Fay is under a spell. Jack and Annie must find four magical objects to reverse the spell, with the help of a mouse named Peanut. In ancient Japan, Jack and Annie encounter ninjas and samurai and get a moonstone. | ||||
The Mystery of the Magic Spell (#2) | #6 | Afternoon on the Amazon (UK title: Adventure on the Amazon) | August 29, 1995 | #5, Rain Forests |
Plot: Jack and Annie search the Amazon rainforest for a second magical object for Morgan le Fay, which turns out to be a mango. | ||||
The Mystery of the Magic Spell (#3) | #7 | Sunset of the Sabertooth (UK title: Mammoth to the Rescue) | April 14, 1996 | #12, Sabertooths and the Ice Age |
Plot: In the last ice age, Jack and Annie encounter Cro-Magnons, wooly mammoths, and a saber-toothed cat while looking for the third object to help Morgan - a mammoth bone flute. | ||||
The Mystery of the Magic Spell (#4) | #8 | Midnight on the Moon (UK title: Moon Mission) | October 29, 1996 | #6, Space |
Plot: Thirty-five years into the future (2031), Jack and Annie travel to a moon base established on the moon to look for the fourth object needed to help Morgan le Fay. | ||||
The Mystery of the Ancient Riddles (#1) | #9 | Dolphins at Daybreak (UK title: Diving with Dolphins) | April 29, 1997 | #9, Dolphins and Sharks |
Plot: Jack and Annie have to solve four ancient riddles, and the first answer is set in the Pacific Ocean with bottlenose dolphins. | ||||
The Mystery of the Ancient Riddles (#2) | #10 | Ghost Town at Sundown (UK title: A Wild West Ride) | September 16, 1997 | #38, Wild West |
Plot: Set in the American Wild West, where Jack and Annie meet a cowboy named Slim to solve the second riddle. | ||||
The Mystery of the Ancient Riddles (#3) | #11 | Lions at Lunchtime (UK title: Lions on the Loose) | February 12, 1998 | N/A |
Plot: Jack and Annie are on a mission to find the third riddle's answer on the African Savannah. | ||||
The Mystery of the Ancient Riddles (#4) | #12 | Polar Bears Past Bedtime (UK title: Icy Escape) | April 24, 1998 | #16, Polar Bears and the Arctic |
Plot: For the final riddle, it is set in the North Pole, where Jack and Annie meet an Inuk and solve an extra riddle after the fourth. | ||||
The Mystery of the Lost Stories (#1) | #13 | Vacation Under the Volcano (UK title: Racing with Gladiators) | June 20, 1998 | #14, Ancient Rome and Pompeii |
Plot: Jack and Annie travel to Pompeii on the eve of the eruption of Mount Vesuvius. | ||||
The Mystery of the Lost Stories (#2) | #14 | Day of the Dragon King (UK title: Palace of the Dragon King) | August 11, 1998 | #31, China: Land of the Emperor's Great Wall |
Plot: Jack and Annie travel to China as it was 2,000 years in their past, ruled by the Dragon King, or Emperor Qin. | ||||
The Mystery of the Lost Stories (#3) | #15 | Viking Ships at Sunrise (UK title: Voyage of the Vikings) | October 20, 1998 | #33, Vikings |
Plot: In medieval Ireland, Jack and Annie encounter Vikings. | ||||
The Mystery of the Lost Stories (#4) | #16 | Hour of the Olympics (UK title: Olympic Challenge!) | December 17, 1998 | #10, Ancient Greece and the Olympics |
Plot: Jack and Annie travel to Ancient Greece and see the first Olympic games. | ||||
The Mystery of the Enchanted Dog (#1) | #17 | Tonight on the Titanic | March 23, 1999 | #7, Titanic |
Plot: Jack and Annie travel back to 1912 and are on the RMS Titanic during her fateful voyage. In this arc, the two are assisted by a dog named Teddy that they must find gifts for so he can become human again. | ||||
The Mystery of the Enchanted Dog (#2) | #18 | Buffalo Before Breakfast | May 18, 1999 | N/A |
Plot: In the American Old West, Jack and Annie encounter a Lakota boy on the Great Plains. | ||||
The Mystery of the Enchanted Dog (#3) | #19 | Tigers at Twilight | August 17, 1999 | N/A |
Plot: Jack and Annie explore the Indian jungle to find a gift from a forest far away. Along the way, they work together to save a tiger from a steel trap. | ||||
The Mystery of the Enchanted Dog (#4) | #20 | Dingoes at Dinnertime | March 14, 2000 | N/A |
Plot: Jack and Annie explore in the Australian Outback to find the gift from a kangaroo. Along the way, they helped a joey and a koala bear escape a wildfire. As soon as Jack and Annie receive the final gift and return home, Morgan removes the spell on the dog, who is soon revealed to be a boy named Teddy, a young magician who trapped himself under a spell causing him to become a dog. | ||||
The Mystery of Morgan's Library (#1) | #21 | Civil War on Sunday | May 23, 2000 | N/A |
Plot: In the American Civil War, Jack and Annie encounter Clara Barton. | ||||
The Mystery of Morgan's Library (#2) | #22 | Revolutionary War on Wednesday | September 26, 2000 | #11, American Revolution |
Plot: Jack and Annie travel back in time and cross the Delaware River with George Washington. | ||||
The Mystery of Morgan's Library (#3) | #23 | Twister on Tuesday | March 27, 2001 | #8, Twisters and Other Terrible Storms |
Plot: In the 1870s, Jack and Annie encounter pioneer settlement of the Midwestern prairie and must save a teacher and some kids before they are hit by a tornado. | ||||
The Mystery of Morgan's Library (#4) | #24 | Earthquake in the Early Morning | August 24, 2001 | N/A |
Plot: In 1906, Jack and Annie experience the San Francisco earthquake. The two are able to use what they find to inspire King Arthur to battle Mordred, although in a later book it is shown that he wins without dying in these stories. | ||||
The Mystery of Morgan's Rhymes (#1) | #25 | Stage Fright on a Summer Night | March 12, 2002 | N/A |
Plot: In Elizabethan England, Jack and Annie meet William Shakespeare. | ||||
The Mystery of Morgan's Rhymes (#2) | #26 | Good Morning, Gorillas! | August 23, 2002 | N/A |
Plot: In the Congo rainforest, Jack and Annie encounter gorillas. | ||||
The Mystery of Morgan's Rhymes (#3) | #27 | Thanksgiving on Thursday | October 24, 2002 | #13, Pilgrims |
Plot: In Plymouth in 1621, Jack and Annie share the first Thanksgiving with the Pilgrims and Wampanoag Indians. | ||||
The Mystery of Morgan's Rhymes (#4) | #28 | High Tide in Hawaii | March 25, 2003 | #15, Tsunamis and Other Natural Disasters |
Plot: Jack and Annie travel to the Hawaii of the past and almost get caught in a tsunami. They also make two friends who share an adventure with them. | ||||
Learning from Heroes (#1) | #29 | A Big Day for Baseball | August 1, 2017 | #37, Baseball |
Plot: Jack & Annie are whisked back to Brooklyn's Ebbets Field on April 15, 1947, to witness Jackie Robinson's Major League debut. | ||||
Learning from Heroes (#2) | #30 | Hurricane Heroes in Texas | August 7, 2018 | #39, Texas |
Plot: The magic tree house takes Jack and Annie to Galveston, Texas circa 1900, where they find out that a big storm is coming. | ||||
Learning from Heroes (#3) | #31 | Warriors in Winter | January 8, 2019 | #40, Warriors |
Plot: When the magic tree house whisks Jack and Annie back to the early 100s AD, they find themselves in a Roman camp. | ||||
Learning from Heroes (#4) | #32 | To the Future, Ben Franklin | July 9, 2019 | #41, Benjamin Franklin. |
Plot: The magic tree house whisks Jack and Annie back to meet Benjamin Franklin, only to cause a time paradox when he returns to their time with them. | ||||
Animal Rescues (#1) | #33 | Narwhal on a Sunny Night | January 7, 2020 | #42, Narwhals and Other Whales |
Plot: When the magic tree house takes Jack and Annie to Greenland, they find out that their mission is to save a narwhal. | ||||
Animal Rescues (#2) | #34 | Late Lunch with Llamas | July 7, 2020 | #43, Llamas and the Andes |
Plot: After their last rescue mission back in Greenland, The Magic Tree House takes them into Llama Territory in South America. | ||||
Animal Rescues (#3) | #35 | Camp Time in California | March 2, 2021 | #28, Heroes for All Times |
Plot: The Magic Tree House takes Jack and Annie to California, where they must save the wilderness. | ||||
Animal Rescues (#4) | #36 | Sunlight on the Snow Leopard | January 4, 2022 | #44, Snow Leopards and Other Wild Cats |
Plot: The magic tree house takes Jack and Annie to Nepal with a mission to find a ghost. | ||||
Animal Rescues (#5) | #37 | Rhinos at Recess | January 3, 2023 | N/A |
Plot: Jack and Annie are whisked off on an adventure in South Africa, where a majestic rhino needs saving! | ||||
Animal Rescues (#6) | #38 | Time of the Turtle King | September 5, 2023 | N/A |
Plot: Jack and Annie are whisked away in the magic tree house to the Galapagos islands, where they must save a sea turtle from an erupting volcano! | ||||
Unknown at this time | #39 | Windy Night with Wild Horses [34] | May 7, 2024 | N/A |
Plot: Jack and Annie meet the little horses of Mongolia that are returning from near extinction and the people who take care of them. The last of the little horses are in danger of the wolves nearby. |
Merlin Missions subseries
Magic Tree House: Merlin Missions books 1-27 were written for more advanced readers. They are more challenging adventures for readers ages 7–10.[33] The Magic Tree House: Merlin Missions were originally ordered sequentially, starting at Book #29 (Christmas in Camelot). With the 25th anniversary re-prints, the books have been separated into their own distinct series and re-numbered starting at Merlin Mission #1.[33]
Original # | Merlin Mission # | Title | Published | Story Arc | Plot Summary/Notes | Companion book |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
29 | 1 | Christmas in Camelot | October 10, 2001 | In the Quest to save Camelot arc #1 | Jack and Annie go on a quest to save Camelot, a quest that will prove to a beleaguered King Arthur that children and imagination really can make a difference. Eventually Jack and Annie break the spell over Camelot and meet the Knights of the Round Table most notably Sir Lancelot. This is also the first story where Merlin the Magician sends Jack and Annie on an adventure instead of Morgan, having learned of their abilities from Morgan Le Fay. | N/A |
30 | 2 | Haunted Castle on Hallows Eve | June 18, 2003 | In the Quest to save Camelot arc #2 | Jack, Annie, and Teddy must restore order to a duke's castle, on the outer realm of Camelot, for Merlin. Jack and Annie reunite with Teddy from the Enchanted Dog arc who becomes a recurring character in the rest of the books. It is also the first book where Jack and Annie perform their own magic. Jack and Annie are able to use the power of a magic hazel twig to transform themselves back to humans from ravens and Jack is able to tap into its power to defeat the Evil Raven King by turning him into a baby raven. This new ability of theirs is likely foreshadowing of later books when they start to make magic of their own. | N/A |
31 | 3 | Summer of the Sea Serpent | March 9, 2004 | In the Quest to save Camelot arc #3 | Jack and Annie must retrieve the Sword of Light for Merlin for all the good of Camelot. Jack and Annie meet Kathleen who, along with Teddy, becomes a recurring character in the books, acting as their sidekick. In this book Jack and Annie turn into seals to retrieve the Sword of Light and earn the right to wield it, learning later that the sword is in fact Excalibur and they retrieved it from Camelot's past so King Arthur can one day get it. | N/A |
32 | 4 | Winter of the Ice Wizard | September 28, 2004 | In the Quest to save Camelot arc #4 | Jack and Annie must go on a mission for the evil Ice Wizard, which is retrieving one of his eyes, in order to free Merlin and Morgan. | N/A |
33 | 5 | Carnival at Candlelight | March 8, 2005 | In the Using magic wisely arc #1 | Jack and Annie must go and save Venice, Italy from a flood disaster, but Merlin's instructions are confusing. The next four books are part of an arc where Jack and Annie complete missions to prove to Merlin that they can use magic wisely. | N/A |
34 | 6 | Season of the Sandstorms | June 26, 2005 | In the Using magic wisely arc #2 | Jack and Annie must help the caliph of ancient Baghdad spread wisdom to the world. | N/A |
35 | 7 | Night of the New Magicians | March 14, 2006 | In the Using magic wisely arc #3 | Jack and Annie travel to the Paris Exposition Universelle of 1889 in the Magic Tree House. They have to save four new magicians (Alexander Graham Bell, Louis Pasteur, Thomas Edison, and Gustave Eiffel), before an evil sorcerer kidnaps them and steals the secrets of their magic. As it turns out, there is no evil sorcerer and the only one that shows up is Merlin himself who had wanted Jack and Annie to meet the four. | N/A |
36 | 8 | Blizzard of the Blue Moon | September 26, 2006 | In the Using magic wisely arc #4 | Jack and Annie travel in the Magic Tree House to the New York City of the Great Depression in 1938. They must help a unicorn under a spell. However, two evil sorcerers in training, Balor and Grinda, are up to the same challenge. In this book, Jack and Annie are given the power to make magic on their own via a magic wand. | N/A |
37 | 9 | Dragon of the Red Dawn | February 27, 2007 | In the Happiness arc #1 | Jack and Annie travel back in the Magic Tree House to feudal Japan to find the first of four secrets of happiness for Merlin the magician because Morgan has noticed that he does not feel well, does not eat or sleep, and is tired. To do this, they must spend the day with famous Japanese haiku poet Matsuo Bashō. | N/A |
38 | 10 | Monday with a Mad Genius | August 28, 2007 | In the Happiness arc #2 | Jack and Annie travel back in the Magic Tree House to Florence, Italy, to find the second of four secrets of happiness. To do this, they must help Leonardo da Vinci all day, "morning, noon, and afternoon, till the night bird sings its song." They end up unwittingly inspiring him to try and fly his Ornithopter machine with their knowledge of the present day, causing him to crash, which breaks his heart. Annie uses her magic to make them all grow bird wings so that they can all fly. | #19, Leonardo da Vinci |
39 | 11 | Dark Day in the Deep Sea | March 25, 2008 | In the Happiness arc #3 | The magic tree house takes Jack and Annie to a deserted island, in the 1870s, looking for another secret of happiness. They get rescued by scientists on HMS Challenger (1858), in the Atlantic Ocean, and end up helping the scientists, who are looking for a sea monster. This book is 144 pages long, making it the longest book in the entire series. | #17, Sea Monsters |
40 | 12 | Eve of the Emperor Penguin | September 23, 2008 | In the Happiness arc #4 | Jack and Annie go to Antarctica to try to find their last secret of happiness, but they only find penguins. Only the penguins have the answer to this question. This is the only book where it is specifically stated that Jack and Annie did not travel through time. They also use the wand to make magic twice: once to find the penguins and a second time to teleport to Mount Erebus, the only time they use its power twice. | #18, Penguins and Antarctica |
41 | 13 | Moonlight on the Magic Flute | March 10, 2009 | In the Inspiring arc #1 | Jack and Annie head to 18th-century Austria, where they must find and help a musician by the name of Mozart. Decked out in the craziest outfits they've ever worn—including a wig for Jack and a giant hoopskirt for Annie, the two siblings search an entire palace to no avail. Their hunt is further hampered by the appearance of a mischievous little boy who is determined to follow them everywhere. But when the boy lets the animals out of the palace zoo, Jack and Annie have to use the only magic at their disposal to save themselves and the naughty little boy. The party is in the Summer Palace at five o'clock in the evening on October 13, 1762. When Jack and Annie use their magic flute (In Inspiring #1, 2, 3, and 4, the Wand of Dianthus changes into instruments.) Mozart makes a song called The Magic Flute. | N/A |
42 | 14 | A Good Night for Ghosts | July 28, 2009 | In the Inspiring arc #2 | Jack and Annie are on their second mission to find—and inspire—artists to bring happiness to millions. After traveling to New Orleans, Jack and Annie come head to head with some real ghosts, as well as discover the world of jazz when they meet a young Louis Armstrong. | #20, Ghosts |
43 | 15 | Leprechaun in Late Winter | January 12, 2010 | In the Inspiring arc #3 | The kids meet a girl in their third mission to put "artists" on the right path. She is sad because she believes in leprechauns and faeries, but cannot find any. The girl grows up to be Lady Gregory, a famous legend teller of the Irish lore. Can the kids save her from sadness and put the third artist on the right path? This is the first time that something that one of the kids has written has been used to travel through time: the kids time travel by wishing using Jack's notes on where they are traveling to. They travel to 1862 to go to Ireland. | #21, Leprechauns and Irish Folklore |
44 | 16 | A Ghost Tale for Christmas Time | September 14, 2010 | In the Inspiring arc #4 | The kids are whisked back to Victorian England to help famed author Charles Dickens. The kids know Charles had everything he wants. Will the kids find the thing Charles wants? The kids are thrown in jail, only to be saved by Charles Dickens! To find Charles' secret, they will need help from three ghosts and get to know Charles very, very well. | #22, Rags and Riches: Kids in the Time of Charles Dickens |
45 | 17 | A Crazy Day with Cobras | January 11, 2011 | In the Penny's spell arc #1 | When Penny, Merlin's beloved penguin (from Eve of the Emperor Penguin), is accidentally turned to stone by Teddy, the kids must travel to an Indian desert and find an ingredient to a spell before Merlin comes back. Jack and Annie have to escape a swarm of king cobras and meet the infamous All-Power Great Mogul. To start their quest, Jack and Annie must find an emerald rose to find the first piece of breaking Penny's spell. | #23, Snakes and Other Reptiles |
46 | 18 | Dogs in the Dead of Night | August 9, 2011 | In the Penny's spell arc #2 | Jack and his sister Annie travel to the Swiss Alps to get the second magical object to break the spell on the beloved baby penguin, Penny. They face a dog rescue and many other adventures. | #24, Dog Heroes |
47 | 19 | Abe Lincoln At Last! | December 27, 2011 | In the Penny's spell arc #3 | Jack and Annie travel to the time of the Civil War, and they must help a friend of Abe's in order to find the third gift for breaking Penny's spell. The friend is an orphan named Sam. It's a race against time as Jack and Annie try to decide what is right. | #25, Abraham Lincoln |
48 | 20 | A Perfect Time for Pandas | July 24, 2012 | In the Penny's spell arc #4 | Jack and Annie visit China during the Great Sichuan Earthquake of 2008. | #26, Pandas and Other Endangered Species |
49 | 21 | Stallion by Starlight | March 26, 2013 | In the Greatness arc #1 | Jack and Annie go back to Ancient Macedonia for an adventure with Alexander the Great when he was a child and his famous stallion: Bucephalus. | #27, Horse Heroes |
50 | 22 | Hurry Up Houdini![35][36] | August 23, 2013 | In the Greatness arc #2 | Jack and Annie meet magician Harry Houdini. | Magic Tricks from the Tree House |
51 | 23 | High Time for Heroes[37] | January 7, 2014 | In the Greatness arc #3 | Jack and Annie meet Florence Nightingale in Egypt. | #28, Heroes for All Times |
52 | 24 | Soccer on Sunday[38] | May 27, 2014 | In the Greatness arc #4 | Jack and Annie time-travel to Mexico during the 1970 FIFA World Cup in hopes that Pelé will tell them the "secret of greatness". | #29, Soccer |
53 | 25 | Shadow of the Shark | June 23, 2015 | none | While on a vacation from Morgan and Merlin, Jack and Annie accidentally travel back in time over a thousand years to ancient Mayan times and meet sharks and Mayan warriors. In this book, Jack and Annie accidentally go to the right place but the wrong time due to pointing to the wrong illustration. | #32, Sharks and Other Predators |
54 | 26 | Balto of the Blue Dawn | January 5, 2016 | none | Jack and Annie meet Balto, a jet-black Siberian husky in Alaska, 1925. | #34, Dogsledding and Extreme Sports |
55 | 27 | Night of the Ninth Dragon | July 26, 2016 | none | Jack and Annie must help save Merlin, Morgan, Teddy, and Kathleen (trapped in Avalon) and King Arthur (injured) when invaders threaten Camelot. | #35, Dragons and Mythical Creatures |
Magic Tree House Super Edition book
On January 6, 2015, the first and currently only Magic Tree House Super Edition book was released. It is 183 pages long. The super editions are longer than the original Magic Tree House books and the Magic Tree House: Merlin Missions.
# | Title | Published | Story Arc | Plot Summary/Notes | Companion book |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Danger in the Darkest Hour | January 6, 2015 | none | The first Magic Tree House Super Edition is called Danger in the Darkest Hour. [39] It was reprinted as World at War, 1944 in 2017.
Jack and Annie going back to World War II shortly before D-Day to rescue Kathleen from behind enemy lines. It also features the first time they have had to deal with a situation using their own talents and with no help from magic since the Merlin Missions began. |
#36, World War II |
Nonfiction books
The Magic Tree House Fact Trackers (formerly called Magic Tree House Research Guides) are non-fiction companions to the fiction books, written by Mary Pope Osborne, Will Osborne, and Natalie Pope Boyce. They were first released in 2000 by Scholastic and Random House. They provide more in-depth follow-up information on the topics in the series than already covered.[40] As of January 2022, 44 have been published. The first two Fact Trackers were published in August 2000 as companions for the first two stories, then 7 to 8 years old. In 2008 story #39, Dark Day in the Deep Sea and its fact tracker #17, Sea Monsters were the first story and fact tracker to be published simultaneously.
No. | Title | Companion To: | Date Published: |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Dinosaurs | Magic Tree House #1: Dinosaurs Before Dark | August 1, 2000 |
2 | Knights and Castles | Magic Tree House #2: The Knight at Dawn | August 1, 2000 |
3 | Mummies and Pyramids | Magic Tree House #3: Mummies in the Morning | February 27, 2001 |
4 | Pirates | Magic Tree House #4: Pirates Past Noon | May 22, 2001 |
5 | Rain Forests | Magic Tree House #6: Afternoon on the Amazon | September 25, 2001 |
6 | Space | Magic Tree House #8: Midnight on the Moon | February 26, 2002 |
7 | Titanic | Magic Tree House #17: Tonight on the Titanic | August 27, 2002 |
8 | Twisters and Other Terrible Storms | Magic Tree House #23: Twister on Tuesday | February 5, 2003 |
9 | Dolphins and Sharks | Magic Tree House #9: Dolphins at Daybreak | June 4, 2003 |
10 | Ancient Greece and the Olympics | Magic Tree House #16: Hour of the Olympics | June 1, 2004 |
11 | American Revolution | Magic Tree House #22: Revolutionary War on Wednesday | September 14, 2004 |
12 | Sabertooths and the Ice Age | Magic Tree House #7: Sunset of the Sabertooth | February 1, 2005 |
13 | Pilgrims | Magic Tree House #27: Thanksgiving on Thursday | September 1, 2005 |
14 | Ancient Rome and Pompeii | Magic Tree House #13: Vacation Under a Volcano | April 25, 2006 |
15 | Tsunamis and Other Natural Disasters | Magic Tree House #28: High Tide in Hawaii | February 27, 2007 |
16 | Polar Bears and the Arctic | Magic Tree House #12: Polar Bears Past Bedtime | September 25, 2007 |
17 | Sea Monsters | Magic Tree House: Merlin Missions #11: Dark Day in the Deep Sea | March 25, 2008 |
18 | Penguins and Antarctica | Magic Tree House: Merlin Missions #12: Eve of the Emperor Penguin | September 23, 2008 |
19 | Leonardo da Vinci | Magic Tree House: Merlin Missions #10: Monday with a Mad Genius | January 13, 2009 |
20 | Ghosts | Magic Tree House: Merlin Missions #14: A Good Night for Ghosts | July 28, 2009 |
21 | Leprechauns and Irish Folklore | Magic Tree House: Merlin Missions #15: Leprechaun in Late Winter | January 12, 2010 |
22 | Rags and Riches: Kids in the Time of Charles Dickens | Magic Tree House: Merlin Missions #16: A Ghost Tale for Christmas Time | September 14, 2010 |
23 | Snakes and Other Reptiles | Magic Tree House: Merlin Missions #17: A Crazy Day with Cobras | January 11, 2011 |
24 | Dog Heroes | Magic Tree House: Merlin Missions #18: Dogs in the Dead of Night | August 9, 2011 |
25 | Abraham Lincoln | Magic Tree House: Merlin Missions #19: Abe Lincoln At Last! | December 27, 2011 |
26 | Pandas and Other Endangered Species | Magic Tree House: Merlin Missions #20: A Perfect Time for Pandas | July 24, 2012 |
27 | Horse Heroes[41] | Magic Tree House: Merlin Missions #21: Stallion by Starlight | March 26, 2013 |
28 | Heroes for All Times | Magic Tree House: Merlin Missions #23: High Time for Heroes Magic Tree House #35: Camp Time in California |
January 7, 2014 |
29 | Soccer[42] | Magic Tree House: Merlin Missions #24: Soccer on Sunday | May 27, 2014 |
30 | Ninjas and Samurai | Magic Tree House #5: Night of the Ninjas | September 23, 2014 |
31 | China: Land of the Emperor's Great Wall | Magic Tree House #14: Day of the Dragon King | December 23, 2014 |
32 | Sharks and Other Predators | Magic Tree House: Merlin Missions #25: Shadow of the Shark | June 23, 2015 |
33 | Vikings | Magic Tree House #15: Viking Ships at Sunrise | September 22, 2015 |
34 | Dogsledding and Extreme Sports | Magic Tree House: Merlin Missions #26: Balto of the Blue Dawn | January 5, 2016 |
35 | Dragons and Mythical Creatures | Magic Tree House: Merlin Missions #27: Night of the Ninth Dragon | July 26, 2016 |
36 | World War II | Magic Tree House Super Edition: World at War, 1944 | March 14, 2017 |
37 | Baseball | Magic Tree House #29: A Big Day for Baseball | August 1, 2017 |
38 | Wild West | Magic Tree House #10: Ghost Town at Sundown | January 2, 2018 |
39 | Texas | Magic Tree House #30: Hurricane Heroes in Texas | August 7, 2018 |
40 | Warriors | Magic Tree House #31: Warriors in Winter | January 8, 2019 |
41 | Benjamin Franklin | Magic Tree House #32: To the Future, Ben Franklin | July 9, 2019 |
42 | Narwhals and Other Whales | Magic Tree House #33: Narwhal on a Sunny Night | January 7, 2020 |
43 | Llamas and the Andes | Magic Tree House #34: Late Lunch with Llamas | July 7, 2020 |
44 | Snow Leopards and Other Wild Cats | Magic Tree House #36: Sunlight on the Snow Leopard | January 4, 2022 |
Other Magic Tree House books
# | Title | Published | Story Arc | Summary/Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Memories and Life Lessons from the Magic Tree House | September 6, 2022 | none | This book serves as a celebration of the 30th anniversary of the Magic Tree House series, including quotes from the series and illustrations by the original artist, Sal Murdocca. Mary Pope Osborne fills this book with advice and with life lessons to share with the readers of the Magic Tree House[43]. |
References
- Mazzucco-Than, C. (2007). Mary Pope Osborne. Guide to Literary Masters & Their Works, 1. Retrieved from EBSCOhost.
- "Mary Pope Osborne." Contemporary Authors Online, Gale, 2006. Accessed 15 Mar. 2018.
- "Random House Children's Books Presents Mary Pope Osborne" (PDF). Random House Children's Book. Random House. Retrieved 16 March 2018.
- Cooper, Ilene (1 Oct 1996). "Love Always, Blue". Booklist: 750.
- Sutherland, Zena (Jan 1984). "review of Love Always, Blue". Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books: 94.
- February 21, Madeline Raynor; EST, 2017 at 11:18 AM. "'Magic Tree House' Author Mary Pope Osborne on the Books' 25th Anniversary". EW.com. Retrieved 2022-03-01.
- La Gorge, Tammy (13 April 2008). "Taking Young Readers on a Magical History Tour". New York Times. p. CT6.
- "For Writers, a Place to Work in Peace: The Room in the Village offers a haven from disturbance. 'There's a sense that you matter and that writing matters.'". New York Times. 30 January 1988. p. 17.
- "Transported to Another Time". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2022-03-01.
- "Mary Pope Osborne Interview Transcript". Scholastic. Retrieved February 28, 2022.
- Mary Pope Osborne Interview on The Magic Tree House, retrieved 2022-03-01
- "Sal Murdocca | Penguin Random House". PenguinRandomhouse.com. Retrieved 2022-03-01.
- "Let's Do It Again . . . and Again! Why is Repetition Important to Learning?". Nemours Reading BrightStart!. Retrieved 2022-03-01.
- "From 'The Magic Tree House,' Kids Branch Out To Chapter Books". NPR.org. Retrieved 2022-03-01.
- Rodriguez, Jodie (February 13, 2019). "Why the Magic Tree House Has a Magical Effect on Kids". Scholastic.
- "Mary Pope Osborne Ludington Award". Educational Book & Media Association. Retrieved 15 March 2018.
- "Heidelberger Leander". leseleben (in German). Association for the promotion of language and reading culture in children. Retrieved 15 March 2018.
- "Distinguished Alumnus/Alumna Award". UNC General Alumni Association.
- "Steve Case, four others, to receive honorary degrees at Commencement". The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Archived from the original on 2019-08-24. Retrieved 2019-08-24.
- Gallagher, Chris (23 October 2011). ""Magic Tree House" film premieres in Japan". Reuters. Retrieved 19 March 2018.
- Vierra, Meredith (13 December 2012). "Magic of Mary: 'Magic Tree House' author rocks kids' socks off". Retrieved 19 March 2018.
- Raynor, Madeline (21 February 2017). "Magic Tree House author Mary Pope Osborne on the books' 25th anniversary". Entertainment Weekly. Time Inc. Retrieved 21 March 2018.
- Lodge, Sally (10 October 2013). "Magic Tree House Reading Buddies Week Rolls Out". Publishers Weekly. Retrieved 21 March 2018.
- Rizzo, Frank (14 September 2007). "'Tree House' Magic Shows". Hartford Courant. Retrieved 29 March 2018.
- "Magic Treehouse Study Guide" (PDF). Orlando Shakespeare Theater. Retrieved 29 March 2018.
- Jones, Kenneth (5 June 2007). "Cass Morgan, Donna Bullock Sing on Magic Tree House Studio Cast Album". Playbill. Retrieved 29 March 2018.
- "100 Great Children's Books | 100 Years". The New York Public Library. Retrieved 2020-05-21.
- Catton, Pia (15 Oct 2012). "Gateway to the Arts: Newark's Case for Crossing Over". Wall Street Journal (Eastern ed.). p. A.24.
- Driscoll, Molly (27 July 2012). "'Magic Tree House': Author Mary Pope Osborne looks back". Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved 29 March 2018.
- Meyers, Joe (17 December 2013). "Warner Theatre presents Dickens musical premiere". CTPost. Hearst Media. Retrieved 29 March 2018.
- "TIFF 上映作品: マジック・ツリーハウス (Films: The Magic Tree House)" (in Japanese). Tokyo International Film Festival. 2011-10-23. Retrieved 2013-03-06.
- "Magic Tree House Books' 2012 Film Confirmed as Anime". Anime News Network. 2011-03-08. Retrieved 2013-03-06.
- "Celebrating 25 Years – Magic Tree House". www.magictreehouse.com.
- https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/729718/windy-night-with-wild-horses-by-mary-pope-osborne/
- Osborne, Mary Pope (2013). Hurry up, Houdini!. Random House Children's Books. ISBN 9780307980472. OCLC 816027002.
- This book is first published on korea.
- Osborne, Mary Pope (2014). High Time for Heroes. Random House Children's Books. ISBN 9780307980496. OCLC 840464294.
- Osborne, Mary Pope (2014). Hurry up, Houdini!. Random House Children's Books. ISBN 9780307980533. OCLC 857879351.
- "Magic Tree House Super Edition #1: Danger in the Darkest Hour".
- "Magic Tree House The Mystery of the Ancient Riddles Boxed Set #3: Book 9-12 (Magic Treehouse Series): "Meet the writer: Biography"". Barnes & Noble. Archived from the original on May 10, 2008. Retrieved July 2, 2013.
- Osborne, Mary Pope (2013). Horse Heroes. Paw Prints. ISBN 9781451786026. OCLC 81160106.
- Osborne, Mary Pope (2014). Soccer. Random House. ISBN 9780385386296. OCLC 857879358.
- "Memories and Life Lessons from the Magic Tree House by Mary Pope Osborne: 9780593484548 | PenguinRandomHouse.com: Books". PenguinRandomhouse.com. Retrieved 2022-03-01.
External links
- Official website
- Magic Tree House at Media Factory (in Japanese)
- Mary Pope Osborne blog
- Magic Tree House series listing at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database