The Enchanted Garden - Adventures Can Fly (Vol.2)

  • Magical series for girls
  • Truly enchanting topic: using magical plants to do good in the world
  • Marvellously illustrated by Eva Schöffmann-Davidov

Tilda and her new friend Anni are very excited: The old man from the garden next door, Mr. Bovist, wants to introduce them to the secrets of the magical plants and train them to become magic gardeners! But the three forget about one person: the crook Gunnar. He insists on his rights to the garden, the magical plants and the magic handbook, and he wants to have his promised inheritance at all costs. If necessary, with the help of magical powers.
Tilda and Anni have to be careful! Lucky for them, they have the magical flowers and with them they become invisible and can fly – yippie – to rescue the magically shrunk Mr. Bovist from Gunnar’s clutches. And the magical power even lasts long enough to teach Lukas, the mean boy at school who continuously bullies the other kids, a lesson …

Contact Foreign Rights
Rights sold to

Denmark | Indonesia | Russia | Slovac Republic 

  • Publisher: Fischer Sauerländer
  • Release: 28.08.2019
  • ISBN: 978-3-7373-4143-1
  • 240 Pages
  • Series: Der Zaubergarten
  • Authors: Nelly Möhle
  • Illustrated by: Eva Schöffmann-Davidov
The Enchanted Garden - Adventures Can Fly (Vol.2)
Nelly Möhle Eva Schöffmann-Davidov The Enchanted Garden - Adventures Can Fly (Vol.2)
Gaby Gerster
© Gaby Gerster
Nelly Möhle

When she was a child, Nelly Möhle loved to wander around the huge garden of her grandparents and to make up stories. Between rose brambles and mysterious fir trees she gave her imagination free rein. At some point, she started writing her stories down. “The Enchanted Garden – Secrets are Blue” is Nelly Möhle’s debut and it is as exuberant and cheerful as a colourful garden. The author lives with her family, a dog and a one-hundred-year-old turtle in Offenburg.

Klaus Renner
© Klaus Renner
Eva Schöffmann-Davidov

Eva Schöffmann-Davidov , born in 1973, has been drawing from an early age. She attended the Freie Kunstwerkstatt in Munich before studying graphic design in Augsburg.