Oh, are you missing out!<br /><br />I highly recommend you check out her books, especially "A Wrinkle In Time", "A Wind at the Door", and "A Swiftly Tilting Planet". I also like "Many Waters", though it's not quite as closely tied to the other three. (Of those four, it is the only one featuring the twins.) These are the four of her books that are most imaginative; most of her other books are more ordinary dramas. She had a remarkable imagination.<br /><br />"A Wrinkle in Time" is about a search for Meg's father, who disappeared after a government research project to attempt interplanetary travel using a tesseract -- a wrinkle in spacetime. Meg is assisted by a boy who later becomes her boyfriend and eventually her husband (in later books) and her brilliant baby brother Calvin and by three odd ladies who are apparently retired stars: Mrs Who, Mrs Whatsit, and Mrs Which. It's an odd book, but well worth reading.<br /><br />"A Wind at the Door" is set mostly inside of one of Calvin's mitochondria.<br /><br />"A Swiftly Tilting Planet" stars Calvin as he travels through time on the back of a unicorn to meet his ancestors and set some things right.<br /><br />"Many Waters" has Meg and Calvin's twin brothers messing around with one of their dad's experiments -- and finding themselves deposited in the desert in the time of Noah. But don't be fooled; this isn't a Biblical literalist story. As with the tesseract and the mitochondrion in previous books, it doesn't really work the way you might expect.<br /><br />There is a curious, dream-like quality to each of these books. I highly recommend them. <div class="Discussion_UserSignature"> <p> </p><p><font color="#666699"><em>"People assume that time is a strict progression of cause to effect, but actually from a non-linear, non-subjective viewpoint it's more like a big ball of wibbly wobbly . . . timey wimey . . . stuff."</em> -- The Tenth Doctor, "Blink"</font></p> </div>