Do not step on the cracks. The girls will forgive you, but the floor will not.
End of Excerpt.
There is a place not marked on any map, though every map folds toward it at the corners. It is called the Nursery, though no one here is young in the way mortals understand youth. The Immortal Girls—there are seven of them, or twelve, or perhaps three hundred, depending on which door you open—have lived so long that their childhood has become a kind of continent. the immortal girls nursery travelogue
No one leaves the Nursery. Not really. The girls have tried: walking out the front door, climbing down the ivy, growing old on purpose. But every exit leads back to the Wicker Gate. Every attempt at aging turns, at the last moment, into a game of hide-and-seek. Do not step on the cracks
Travelers are advised not to ask which doll is favorite. The last person who did is now a rocking chair. There is a place not marked on any
The travelogue ends here, not because there is nothing more to see, but because the girls have invited you to stay for supper. Supper is always bread and jam. The jam changes flavor based on your most secret wish. The bread is slightly burnt.