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The Time Quintet Series in Order: 5 books


  • Book - 1

    It was a dark and stormy night; Meg Murry, her small brother Charles Wallace, and her mother had come down to the kitchen for a midnight snack when they were upset by the arrival of a most disturbing stranger. "Wild nights are my glory," the unearth...



  • Book - 2

    A Wind in the Door is a fantastic adventure story involving Meg Murry, her small brother Charles Wallace, and Calvin O'Keefe, the chief characters of A Wrinkle in Time. The seed from which the story grows is the rather ordinary situation of Charles W...



  • Book - 3

    Meg Murry O'Keefe and her family are just sitting down to Thanksgiving dinner when her father gets a phone call from the White House about a madman's threat of nuclear war. Only an old Irish rune seems to hold a clue to averting worldwide disaster. W...



  • Book - 4

    A touch of computer keys, a blast of heat, and suddenly the Murry twins, Sandy and Dennys, are gasping in a shimmering desert land. If only the brothers had normal parents, not a scientist mother and a father who experiments with space and time trave...



  • Book - 5

    A flash of lightning, quivering ground, and, instead of her grandparents' farm, Polly sees mist and jagged mountains -- and coming toward her, a group of young men carrying spears. Why has a time gate opened and dropped Polly into a world that exist...





Series Premise

The series follows the Murray family (and later their friends and descendants) as they are drawn into extraordinary adventures involving time travel, space travel, interdimensional journeys, and battles between good and evil. The stories center on the concepts of love, faith, free will, and the interconnectedness of all things across time and space. Each book features a different crisis—often a threat to the universe, a loved one, or the balance of creation—resolved through courage, sacrifice, scientific curiosity, and spiritual strength rather than brute force. The overarching mythology involves the struggle between light and darkness (personified by forces like the Black Thing, Echthroi, and the ancient evil), the power of naming and love to overcome evil, and the idea that ordinary people (especially children) can play crucial roles in cosmic events.



The Time Quintet Series Characters

> Meg Murry — Central heroine of the first three books; awkward, highly intelligent, fiercely loving teenage girl with a strong sense of justice. She struggles with self-doubt but grows into a courageous protector of love and light.
> Charles Wallace Murry — Meg’s extraordinarily gifted younger brother; a genius with almost mystical perception and wisdom beyond his years. Central to several books; often the most spiritually attuned.
> Calvin O'Keefe — Meg’s friend and eventual husband; athletic, empathetic, and intuitive. Provides grounding, humor, and unwavering loyalty.
> Dr. Kate Murry — Meg and Charles Wallace’s mother; brilliant scientist (biologist); loving, absent-minded, and fiercely protective.
> Dr. Alex Murry — Their father; physicist who disappears into another dimension in A Wrinkle in Time; brilliant, kind, and deeply loving.
> Sandy and Dennys Murry — The “normal” twin brothers; practical and athletic; central to Many Waters.
> Mrs. Whatsit, Mrs. Who, Mrs. Which — Three mysterious, powerful beings (angels in disguise) who guide the children in the first three books; quirky, wise, and deeply loving.

Setting of the The Time Quintet Series

A richly imagined universe that spans multiple dimensions, times, and worlds:
> Earth — primarily the Murray family home in rural New England (a large, old house filled with books, science equipment, and love).
> The universe — cosmic journeys to distant planets, alternate realities, different time periods, and abstract spaces (e.g., the planet > Camazotz in A Wrinkle in Time, the microscopic world inside a mitochondrion in A Wind in the Door, ancient biblical times in Many Waters).
> The tesseract (wrinkling space-time), kything (a form of deep connection across distance), and other metaphysical spaces.
The atmosphere is both intimate (family life) and vast (cosmic scale), with a sense of wonder at the interconnectedness of all creation.

Tone & Themes of the The Time Quintet Series

Poetic, hopeful, and deeply spiritual — a blend of wonder, awe, and quiet intensity. The tone is thoughtful and philosophical, with moments of lyrical beauty, gentle humor, and profound emotional resonance. It is never grim or cynical; even in dark moments, the series emphasizes hope, love, sacrifice, and the triumph of light. The writing is rich, imaginative, and often allegorical (with Christian undertones of grace, redemption, and the battle between good and evil), but accessible and emotionally honest — uplifting and inspiring for both children and adults.

The series is celebrated for its imaginative world-building, profound spiritual and philosophical themes, strong family bonds, and empowering message that love is the greatest force in the universe — perfect for readers who enjoy thoughtful fantasy with heart, like Madeleine L’Engle’s own work or C.S. Lewis. It has mature themes (loss, war, sacrifice) but remains accessible to young readers. The first book won the Newbery Medal and has been adapted into a 2018 Disney film. The series remains a timeless classic in children’s and YA literature.



Books in this series fall into the following genres

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Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

There are 5 books in The Time Quintet series.

The Time Quintet series does not have a new book coming out soon. The latest book, An Acceptable Time (Book 5), was published in October 1989.

The first book in The Time Quintet series, A Wrinkle in Time, was published in January 1962.

The Time Quintet series primarily falls into the Fantasy genre. This middle grade series was written for ages 8-12, but can be enjoyed by older readers as well.

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