Editors Reads
FantasyScience FictionYoung Adult

Madeleine L'Engle

American · b. 1918

5 books reviewed Avg rating 4.0 / 5Top rating 4.2 / 5

Newbery Medal (1963), National Book Award (1980)

Madeleine L'Engle was an American author whose A Wrinkle in Time blended science, theology, and adventure into one of the most beloved and frequently challenged books in children's literature.

Madeleine L’Engle submitted A Wrinkle in Time to publishers for two years and collected 26 rejections before Farrar, Straus and Giroux published it in 1962. It won the Newbery Medal the following year, establishing L’Engle as a major voice in children’s literature. The novel — about a girl named Meg Murry who travels through time and space to rescue her scientist father from a dark evil — is genuinely unusual: it fuses physics, Christian mysticism, and a narrative about a girl who succeeds not by becoming conventionally heroic but by embracing her own specific, stubborn love.

The book has been challenged and banned throughout its publishing history by two completely opposed groups: religious conservatives who object to its unconventional theology and its favorable treatment of figures including Einstein alongside Jesus, and secular critics who object to its explicit Christian themes. This dual condemnation is, in its way, a tribute to how strange and resistant the novel actually is. L’Engle was a serious Episcopalian who believed in the compatibility of science and faith, and that conviction shapes a novel that takes both cosmology and love seriously.

A Wrinkle in Time is not without weaknesses — the final act can feel rushed compared to the conceptual richness of the middle section, and some of the later volumes in the Time Quintet do not match its quality. But for readers who encountered it as children, it tends to remain important because it was one of the first books that argued a bookish, awkward, rule-breaking girl could be exactly the right person to save the world.

5 Books Reviewed

A Wrinkle in Time book cover
Bestseller

A Wrinkle in Time

by Madeleine L'Engle

4.2

Meg Murry, her genius brother Charles Wallace, and their friend Calvin travel through space and time using a tesseract to rescue Meg's father from an evil force controlling the universe.

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A Swiftly Tilting Planet book cover

A Swiftly Tilting Planet

by Madeleine L'Engle

4.1

Charles Wallace, now fifteen, travels through time on the back of the unicorn Gaudior to change the course of history and prevent a nuclear war, while Meg participates from a distance through kything — a form of telepathic sharing.

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A Wind in the Door book cover

A Wind in the Door

by Madeleine L'Engle

4.0

Meg Murry must journey inside her brother Charles Wallace's cells to battle a cosmic evil called the Echthroi, accompanied by a Teacher named Blajeny and a strange creature called Proginoskes, in a quest that turns on the power of naming and love.

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Many Waters book cover

Many Waters

by Madeleine L'Engle

4.0

Sandy and Dennys Murry — the 'normal' twins — accidentally travel back to biblical times, to the era just before Noah's flood, where they encounter nephilim, seraphim, and Noah's family in a story about choice, mortality, and the nature of good and evil.

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An Acceptable Time book cover

An Acceptable Time

by Madeleine L'Engle

3.8

Polly O'Keefe — daughter of Meg Murry — discovers a time gate near her grandparents' New England farm that opens into the world of three thousand years ago, where she becomes entangled in a conflict between two ancient peoples and a druid named Karralys.

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