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OF MICE AND MAGIC

From the Hamster Princess series , Vol. 2

Maintaining a keen balance between silly and sly, this sequel will have readers snickering.

Princess Harriet’s second outing takes on the “Twelve Dancing Princesses.”

Although hamster Harriet is, sadly, no longer invincible, having broken her curse in Harriet the Invincible (2015), she’s got a hero’s skills after her previous adventures. Seeking new excitement, she encounters a lonely old lady by the side of the road asking for food; genre-savvy Harriet quickly deduces that it’s a disguised fairy and complies. She’s rewarded with a quest to save 12 mouse princesses, cursed to slip away every night to a mysterious location where they dance right through their slippers. When Harriet suggests that they might like dancing (as she liked her curse) and that it would be rude to just go breaking it without asking them, the fairy tells her that Harriet’s kingdom too will face doom—at some unspecified point in the future—unless the curse is broken. Harriet arrives to find the mouse king a despot who inflicts his peculiar organizational whims on his subjects, such as militant matching and forced color coordination of clothing to each room. The princesses—who range in their enjoyment of femininity to stand as foils to tomboyish Harriet—don’t like dancing (anymore) or being trapped, clearing Harriet to save the day. While Harriet prizes her physical prowess, Vernon here allows her to show off her smarts as equally impressive.

Maintaining a keen balance between silly and sly, this sequel will have readers snickering. (Graphic/fantasy hybrid. 7-12)

Pub Date: March 15, 2016

ISBN: 978-0-8037-3984-0

Page Count: 240

Publisher: Dial Books

Review Posted Online: Dec. 21, 2015

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 1, 2016

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BECAUSE OF THE RABBIT

Delightful.

A young girl learns about honesty, integrity, and friendship when she finds a lost rabbit and starts school for the first time.

Home-schooled by her mother, young Emma is very close to her parents and brother. She has beautiful memories of visiting her grandparents (now deceased) across the border in Quebec, where she learned about French-Canadian farming culture. Mémère taught her to bake, while Pépère told her stories about Monsieur Lapin, the rabbit, and all his woodland friends. But now Emma’s life is changing. Her older brother, Owen, was her constant companion until he started high school and built a social life all his own. Lonely and hoping to make a friend, Emma decides to quit home schooling and enter the fifth grade at Lakeview Elementary. The night before she embarks on her first class, she accompanies her game-warden father on a call, and they find a pet bunny stuck in a fence. Mischievous Lapi—named for Pépère’s stories—will offer both challenges and lessons to Emma as she navigates her new school and the politics of making friends with an unpopular boy. The beauty in Lord’s tale of finding home in a new community is the way Emma’s grandfather reaches her with his stories of magic even after he is gone, teaching her important lessons about following through on one’s promises. Emma and her family are white, their Franco-American heritage a rarity in children’s literature.

Delightful. (Fiction. 8-12)

Pub Date: March 26, 2019

ISBN: 978-0-545-91424-6

Page Count: 192

Publisher: Scholastic

Review Posted Online: Dec. 4, 2018

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 1, 2019

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DREAM ON

From the Dream On series , Vol. 1

Heartfelt and accessible: another winner from a beloved author.

Fourth grader Cassie dreams of solving all her problems by winning a contest.

It’s May 1984, and Cassie Carpenter feels overwhelmed by how much she needs—attention, space, money, and more. Things that feel trivial to others are overwhelming for her, and others call her “melodramatic,” “sensitive,” and “so emotional.” Still, Cassie’s problems are real: Her house is too small for everyone in her family to have their own bed or sit at the same table for dinner. Money is tight, and her mother is too tired to notice that Cassie needs her. At school, Cassie’s best friend starts pulling away, preferring an unkind classmate. Then, Cassie receives a life-changing piece of mail: A magazine sweepstakes declares her a “grand prize winner”! A catalog of prizes accompanies a magazine order form, and Cassie is swept away by fantasies of how a vacation or a water bed for her mom might solve all her problems. But soon she finds that the contest is far from the easy fix she imagined. Hale’s gift for capturing middle-grade joys and agonies is once again on full display, and fans of her Best Friends graphic memoir trilogy will find much to love in this series opener. Cespedes’ illustrations and Pien’s colors are vibrant and appealing, capturing the liabilities and, importantly, the gifts to be found in Cassie’s deeply emotional worldview. Cassie’s family reads white; other characters are racially diverse.

Heartfelt and accessible: another winner from a beloved author. (author’s note) (Graphic fiction. 8-12)

Pub Date: Aug. 26, 2025

ISBN: 9781250843067

Page Count: 240

Publisher: Roaring Brook Press

Review Posted Online: May 16, 2025

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 2025

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