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THE LAST WINDWITCH

Satisfying fare for readers who prefer their heroes and baddies clearly distinguished.

Unwittingly caught up in a magical family’s deadly quarrel, an apprentice hedgewitch discovers that she has a higher destiny.

Adopted as a foundling by Mother Magdi, a kindly hedgewitch, Brida has spent much of her 12 years struggling to learn herbal spellcraft. Unfortunately, in discovering that she has a truer knack for a more powerful, intuitive form of magic, she draws the cruel attention of Moira, Queen of Crows, whose evil magic has driven away her two sisters and knocked the once-peaceful realm so out of kilter that the weather has turned unpredictable, the population is terrorized, and zombie revenants and other monsters are rising. What can Brida do to fight such evil? What else but harness other magics, including the white, or sacred; the hedgewitches’ nature-based green; the wild magic of the legendary stormhorses—and one other mysterious type, based on wind and long thought to be extinct. Brida never seems to lack for an encounter with a knowledgeable character or overheard conversation to fill in her backstory or conveniently placed allies to bail her out of tight spots; still Adam kits her with a sturdy sense of right and wrong, pits her against several genuinely creepy creatures, and outfits her with simple choices at the climax…plus the power to right all wrongs at the end. Brida presents as White; two secondary characters have copper skin.

Satisfying fare for readers who prefer their heroes and baddies clearly distinguished. (Fantasy. 9-12)

Pub Date: April 13, 2021

ISBN: 978-0-06-298130-1

Page Count: 448

Publisher: Harper/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: Jan. 25, 2021

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2021

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THE LABYRINTH OF DOOM

From the Once Upon a Tim series , Vol. 2

A lighter-than-air blend of knightly exploits and rib-tickling twists.

Princess Grace of Merryland needs rescuing again, forcing two young knights-in-training to face a series of challenges, from hungry cave sharks to a minotaur named Chad.

Actually, Princess Grace is perfectly capable of rescuing herself—again: see Once Upon a Tim (2022)—except that this time, kidnappers have stashed her in a room that’s locked and bolted on the outside…and in the middle of a maze billed, supposedly, as “the most complex and dastardly labyrinth in the world.” So it is that former peasants Tim and his more capable friend Bull—otherwise known as Belinda when she’s not disguised as a boy—plunge into a mess of dark and bewildering tunnels, armed with a ball of twine provided by the surprisingly sapient village idiot Ferkle, to face a series of deadly threats…though the most legendary of all turns out to be an amiable monster with the body of a bull and the head of, well, a dude. Throughout Gibbs’ lighthearted, laugh-out-loud tale, Curtis supplies proper notes of farce or stark terror as appropriate in flurries of line drawings that present most of the humans and the monsters with human features as White, though Belinda appears to present as Black. Along the way, Tim adds educational value to his narrative by flagging and then pausing to define vocabulary-building words like laborious and vexing.

A lighter-than-air blend of knightly exploits and rib-tickling twists. (Fantasy. 10-12)

Pub Date: Nov. 1, 2022

ISBN: 978-1-5344-9928-7

Page Count: 160

Publisher: Simon & Schuster

Review Posted Online: July 12, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 2022

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THORNWOOD

From the Sisters Ever After series , Vol. 1

Effervescent, thrilling, and practically perfect in every way.

It’s hard living beneath the looming curse of becoming the Sleeping Beauty; even harder, in this middle-grade fairy-tale retelling, is being Sleeping Beauty’s sister.

Eleven-year-old Princess Briony loves her older sister, Rosalin. Honestly, she does; she’s just so tired of being ignored while beautiful, doomed Rosalin occupies everyone’s attention. Yet when Briony wakes up on her sister’s 16th birthday in a castle turret equipped with spinning wheel and fairy godmother, she discovers the price of being “important.” Cypess turns her talents for delicate prose and dark, twisty plotting to exploring the characters often left at the periphery. The castle servants, villagers, even fairies—wicked and helpful alike—have their own personalities and agendas. Briony is a delight: spunky, snarky, and brave enough to admit she’s scared. The other characters are equally compelling: Edwin, the clever “village dolt”; Varian, the princely hero, with secrets upon secrets; the terrifying fairy godmother; and the even more terrifying eponymous thicket of thorns, domain of the vicious fairy queen. The heart of the story, though, lies in the utterly authentic relationship between the sisters, who squabble, tease, and hurt each other—and love one another with a fierceness that absolutely demands a happily-ever-after, which this fairy tale delivers, although not one anybody ever expected. Characters read as White by default.

Effervescent, thrilling, and practically perfect in every way. (Fantasy. 9-12)

Pub Date: April 6, 2021

ISBN: 978-0-593-17883-6

Page Count: 272

Publisher: Delacorte

Review Posted Online: Feb. 8, 2021

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 1, 2021

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