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CLOCKED!

From the Misadventures of Nobbin Swill series , Vol. 3

A joustingly jolly good time.

Nobbin, Prince Charming’s assistant, returns for a third outing of mixed-up fairy-tale mysteries, this time featuring Cinderella.

Although he’s determined to defend his family’s honor through winning the joust in their upcoming tournament, Prince Charming lacks the confidence to pull things together. Searching the castle’s lost and found for a good luck charm, he finds a goose that attaches itself to him. Between the goose and a lucky handkerchief his mother made for his father (which is then passed on to Charming), things start to look up. But after he misplaces the handkerchief and believes a mysterious maiden he met at the ball made off with it, Charming takes the glass shoe she left behind to the village. The villagers assume he means to marry the shoe’s wearer, leading to funny moments. The hunt for Cinderella leads the plucky hero to the evil stepmother and stepsisters, who, in mixing up their lies, accidentally dub Cinderella a step-scullery maid in another running gag. Meanwhile, the story gets further convoluted when villainous Rumpelstiltskin uses Charming’s honor against him to claim the goose. The layered, wild-goose–chasing mysteries are kept straight through the illustrated lists that Nobbin makes—other illustrations take advantage of the goose for comedic effect—and provide cover for the villainous actions of scheming Sir Roderick that are revealed in the final act, when all storylines converge. Characters default to White.

A joustingly jolly good time. (map, author’s note) (Fantasy. 8-12)

Pub Date: Aug. 31, 2021

ISBN: 978-1-4998-0975-6

Page Count: 272

Publisher: Yellow Jacket

Review Posted Online: June 15, 2021

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 1, 2021

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ONCE UPON A TIM

Budding heroes defeat class and gender expectations as well as the occasional monster in this wry outing.

Thinking that it’s better to be fake knights than real peasants, Tim and his best buddy, Belinda, sign up to rescue a captured princess.

Unaware that they’ve been snookered into a dastardly scheme, the two youngsters hear that Princess Grace from the next kingdom over has been carried off in the claws of a fearsome and funky “stinx” and volunteer to accompany (reputedly) brave and noble Prince Ruprecht and his (reputedly) powerful magician Nerlim on a rescue mission. Accompanied by village idiot Ferkle, whose habit of shoving mud in his pants effectively lowers the level of humor even further, the two ersatz knights weather the Forest of Doom, the River of Doom, and a “troll bridge” across the Chasm of Doom despite a suspicious lack of assistance from either the prince or the magician…and arrive to discover that neither the stinx nor the princess is quite as expected either. In fact, the princess ends up being the rescuer (“That’s what you call irony,” she comments) when Ruprecht and Nerlim announce their intention to seize her and do away with any inconvenient witnesses. Tim and Belinda are rewarded with promotions for their efforts; readers will come away with both a cogent warning from Gibbs about the dangers of falling for fake news and better vocabularies due to his penchant for flagging significant words like gullible and malodorous in the narrative and then pausing to define and use them in sample sentences. Along with a full-spread map, Curtis supplies frequent pen-and-ink sketches of the cast in comical poses and straits. The races and ethnicities of the characters are not specified in the text, though cover art depicts characters of various skin tones.

Budding heroes defeat class and gender expectations as well as the occasional monster in this wry outing. (Fantasy. 8-12)

Pub Date: March 1, 2022

ISBN: 978-1-5344-9925-6

Page Count: 160

Publisher: Simon & Schuster

Review Posted Online: April 12, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 1, 2022

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SAVING FABLE

From the Talespinners series , Vol. 1

Imaginative, fast-paced, and fun.

Character Indira Story lives in the fictional town of Origin and aspires to a plot of her own.

She works hard to make her dream come true: to travel to the city of Fable and attend Protagonist Preparatory, a school where famous characters such as Alice (from Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland), Fitzwilliam Darcy, and Romeo Montague train aspirants to become successful characters in actual stories. Ultimately, succeeding at Protagonist Preparatory would result in Indira’s being chosen by an Author in the Real World for their novel. Indira is determined to become a protagonist so that she can find her brother, David, a laborer in the town of Quiver, where he mines story nuggets. However, Indira fails her audition and begins to train as a side character. To make matters worse, her best efforts at school are sabotaged, and Fable itself is threatened. The question arises: Can a side character become a hero? Reintgen’s middle-grade debut is at once a fantastic adventure and a tribute to famous and popular literature. The plot feels rushed at times, but witty references—to literary characters and elements of the act of reading itself, like dog ears (envisioned as one-eared dogs who steal watches from anthropomorphic bookmarks)—make this novel enjoyable and laugh-out-loud funny. There is nothing intrinsically Indian about brown-skinned Indira (as her name suggests but as her equally brown-skinned brother’s does not), but her-far-from positive experiences remind readers of the importance of working hard at their own stories.

Imaginative, fast-paced, and fun. (Fantasy. 8-12)

Pub Date: Sept. 17, 2019

ISBN: 978-0-525-64668-6

Page Count: 384

Publisher: Crown

Review Posted Online: June 15, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 1, 2019

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