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DIGORY THE DRAGON SLAYER

A happy go lucky young lutenist finds what he fancies is a dragon’s tooth, and instantly gains an unwanted reputation as a mighty warrior in this none too serious mini-epic. Hailed by the villagers of Batty-By-Noodle and dressed in a suit of armor lovingly crafted by his mother, the local blacksmith, Digory reluctantly sets out to do what knights are supposed to do: rescue damsels and slay dragons. Fortunately, dragons turn out to be easily avoidable. Unfortunately, damsels in distress are all over the map—every one unpleasantly bossy and conceited. Fortunately, Digory’s quest comes to an end when he meets mussy, krumhorn-playing Princess Enid and her kindly, if seriously dysnomic, father King Widget. Unfortunately, they have this dragon problem . . . but, fortunately, Digory’s deaf old steed Barley shows unexpected facility with a magic sword that drops from the sky, and all ends happily. Beck’s rumpled drawings and vignettes add more amiably comic touches. Ready cheeks; insert tongues. (Fantasy. 9-11)

Pub Date: June 1, 2006

ISBN: 1-58234-722-0

Page Count: 128

Publisher: Bloomsbury

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 1, 2006

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BRIGHTSTORM

From the Brightstorm series , Vol. 1

A kid adventurer with a disability makes this steampunk offering stand out.

Orphaned twins, an adventurer dad lost to an ice monster, and an airship race around the world.

In Lontown, 12-year-old twins Arthur and Maudie learn that their explorer father has gone missing on his quest to reach South Polaris, the crew of his sky-ship apparently eaten by monsters. As he’s accused of sabotage, their father’s property is forfeit. The disgraced twins are sent off to live in a garret in a scene straight out of an Edwardian novel à la A Little Princess. Maudie has the consolation of her engineering skills, but all Arthur wants is to be an adventurer like his father. A chance to join Harriet Culpepper’s journey to South Polaris might offer excitement and let him clear his father’s name—if only he can avoid getting eaten by intelligent ice monsters. Though some steampunk set dressing is appropriately over-the-top (such as a flying house, thinly depicted but charming), adaptive tools for Arthur’s disability are wonderfully realistic. His iron arm is a standard, sometimes painful passive prosthesis. The crew adapts the airship galley for Arthur’s needs, even creating a spiked chopping board. Off the ship, Arthur and Maudie meet people and animals in vignettes that are appealingly rendered but slight. Harriet teaches the white twins respect for the cultures they encounter on these travels, though they are never more than observers of non-Lontowners’ different ways.

A kid adventurer with a disability makes this steampunk offering stand out. (Steampunk. 9-11)

Pub Date: March 17, 2020

ISBN: 978-1-324-00564-3

Page Count: 352

Publisher: Norton Young Readers

Review Posted Online: Dec. 7, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 1, 2020

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THE MAGIC HILL

Pooh might describe this 1925 offering from Milne as a Very Small Tale, and so it is, but gentle and sweet withal. Princess Daffodil is the only daughter after six sons of the king and queen, and at her christening the Fairy Mumruffin grants her the gift of flowers, which will grow wherever she steps. When the princess begins toddling about the king’s favorite thinking place, strewing flowers everywhere, the king decides she must keep off the paths entirely. After a few years of this, the doctor pronounces that she must do what little girls do: “She must run about more. She must climb hills and roll down them. She must hope and skip and jump.” So the queen finds a solution in a small hill, where Daffodil can do all those things to her heart’s content, and where children play and pick the posies she makes there. Brown, who remembered the story from her own mother’s telling, who remembered it from her mother, has created delicate and winsome illustrations that are also precise: the various species of flowers are easily identifiable. Children will be charmed by the little doll-like faces of the characters and the excellent fairy colors, pastel-colored to jewel-toned as needed. (Picture book. 4-7)

Pub Date: Feb. 1, 2000

ISBN: 0-525-46147-7

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Dutton

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 15, 1999

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