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The Children of the Lost

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The Children of the Lost
AuthorDavid Whitley
Cover artistTomislav Tomic
LanguageEnglish
SeriesAgora Trilogy
GenreFantasy
PublisherPuffin
Publication date
2010
Publication placeUnited Kingdom
Media typePrint paperback
Pages416
ISBN0-14-133012-0
Preceded byThe Midnight Charter 
Followed byThe Canticle of Whispers 

The Children of the Lost is a 2010 young adult fantasy novel by British author David Whitley.[1][2] It is the sequel to his debut novel, The Midnight Charter. It continues Mark and Lilly's journey after they are banished from Agora in the first book.

Concept

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The book is set in a fantasy world called Agora, which is governed by an extreme form of capitalism. Anything can be bought and sold- including thoughts, ideas, emotions and ultimately people. Children are traded by their parents, and even on their twelfth birthday they are allowed to become traders themselves.

There is no money in Agora. Instead, people are ranked according to their reputation. It only takes a small rumour or wrongdoing to send even the most powerful merchant down to the bottom, where they normally become "debtors". With nothing left to trade, they are stuck at the bottom, with no means to climb back up the social hierarchy.

Agora is surrounded by walls. Nobody can enter the city, and nobody leave the city. The city itself is split into twelve districts, all named after Zodiac signs. The Director of Receipts watches over the city, and his Receivers police it.

Characters

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  • Mark: a fourteen-year-old boy who replaced Count Stelli as Agora's greatest astrologer.
  • Lily: a fourteen-year-old girl who began the almshouse.
  • Dr Theophilus: nephew of Count Stelli. Works as a doctor. Helps Lily run the almshouse.
  • Count Stelli: an old astrologist. He is Agora's greatest astrologist.
  • Mr Snutworth: Mark's manservant
  • Director of Receipts: Highest authority in Agora

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "The Children of the Lost". Booklist. 1 February 2011. Retrieved 10 February 2025.
  2. ^ Floresiensis. "The Children of the Lost by David Whitley book review". Fantasy Book Review. Retrieved 11 February 2025.
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