Friday, July 20, 2007

The Heir Series

Cinda Williams Chima’s new series grabs your attention from the first page of the prologue and doesn’t let go until the last word. Although the books are about modern day wizards, the story is nothing like Harry Potter.

The Warrior Heir begins in 1870, when a family’s life is ripped apart by wizards, then shifts to a time more than one hundred years later to where Jessamine Longbranch, a wizard and doctor changes the fate of a baby for her own selfish reasons.

Several years later, Jackson Swift wakes up one morning and, in his hurry to get out the door, forgets to take his heart medicine for the first time in sixteen years. Surprisingly, instead of becoming sick, Jack feels better than ever and breezes through his soccer tryouts. He knows something’s up when, after taking his medicine again, he feels anesthetized. Very soon after, his Aunt Linda shows up to take Jack and his friends on a spur-of-the-moment genealogy trip. Along the way they discover more than a few family records; Jack finds a medieval-era sword and learns that he has a destiny: to train as a warrior and fight a duel to the death, but will he fight for the light side or the dark one?

In The Wizard Heir, Seph McCauley is a handsome teenager who leaves a trail of disaster behind him. Unexplained fires, explosions, and other strange occurrences happen wherever he goes. He’s been expelled from four schools in the past three years, and now he’s on his way to a school for troubled boys in Maine. There Seph learns that he is a powerful—although untrained—wizard, but soon he realizes there is a dark side to the magic performed at Havens. Now he must fight to be free against those even more powerful than himself.

Ms. Chima effortlessly blends Jack and Seph’s modern day world with ancient fantasy, making for fast-paced novels with completely engrossing storylines. If you enjoy these two novels, look for The Dragon Heir. I’m sure it will be an amazing finale that includes characters from the first two books and tying the previous stories closer together.

Wednesday, July 4, 2007

Horatio Hornblower: The Duel

1998
Director: Andrew Grieve
Starring: Ioan Gruffudd, Dorian Healy, Robert Lindsay

Seventeen-year-old Horatio Hornblower (Gruffudd) is just beginning his service with the British navy as a midshipman aboard the Justinian. Although at first he is terrified of heights and unused to the rocking of the ship, young Horatio is brilliant at calculating, navigation, and mathematics. But jealousy and hatred arises. Jack Simpson (Healy) is senior midshipman, and with his power over the other midshipmen, he “teaches them their places” by eating their food, beating them when he wishes to, and generally making their lives miserable. So when Horatio is being “snotty” and questions the rules made by Jack Simpson, he becomes the victim of Simpson’s wrath. Struggling to adjust to his new life, attend his duties, and stay out of Simpson’s way, Horatio has a seemingly doomed beginning to his naval career. Transferred to the Indefatigable, Horatio believes for a while that he is safe. But Jack Simpson is never far away, and when he goes a step too far, Horatio decides the abuse can go on no longer, and he challenges the senior midshipman to a duel with pistols. Watch this wonderful movie to find out what happens! The Duel is a great film that will quickly sweep you up in its amazing reenactments of battles at sea, duels, and one young man’s intelligence and determination. If you enjoy this movie, be sure to continue watching the series with The Fireship, The Duchess and the Devil, The Wrong War, The Mutiny, Retribution, Loyalty, and Duty.

Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Fairytales: The Old and the Retold

What makes fairytales so appealing? I think Bravepandagirl explained it very well on her blog:

“The youngest, the poorest, the weakest, the ones who are cast out are the ones who’s stories we hear about in fairytales. They become better people. They slay evil, overcome their fears and turn into brave, wonderful people by the end of the story. I think this is why we love fairytales. This is why they are still around after hundreds of years. Because we can see some of ourselves in Cinderella, or in Vassilissa, or the youngest Tsarevich. We know that part of us is just like them, and we hope that one day our story might turn out as theirs did.”

Fairytales are not only just still “around,” but constantly in style. For instance, Wildwood Dancing has been so popular since its release in January that it was constantly checked out of my library until just last week. No wonder, as Juliet Marillier creates a story as rich and detailed as the cover of the novel. Jena is the daughter of a merchant who lives in an old castle called Piscul Dracului. She and her four sisters have kept a very large secret for nine years; every full moon they cross into Wildwood—the world of the fey—and dance the night away. But as the sisters grow older, changes come and the fairy court becomes more sinister. If you enjoy this novel, don’t miss the sequel, Cybele’s Secret.

Award-winning author Alex Flinn is changing course from her usual realistic fiction with her upcoming novel, Beastly. It’s a retelling of—guess—Beauty and the Beast set in modern times. I believe it will be told through the eyes of the Beast himself, a.k.a. Kyle Kingsbury. I am enormously anxious to see what Ms. Flinn will do with this new genre, as her previous books have been excellent.

Jim Henson’s The Storyteller is a very well done collection of fairytales from around the world—although mainly Russia and Germany—told by the Storyteller (John Hurt) and his dog (voiced by Brian Henson). The tales are told in a way that is enchanting for all ages, and offer a great cast including Miranda Richardson and Sean Bean.

Edith Pattou’s East is not too well known, but it should be. The 500-page plus book really doesn’t seem as long as it is because the whole thing is extremely engrossing, taking you into a world of sparkling snow, loneliness, and love. East is a retelling of East of the Sun, West of the Moon, a Norwegian folktale of a girl following her stolen love to the Troll Queen’s palace.

Just Ella, by Margaret Peterson Haddix, is a funny but not stupid retelling of Cinderella, which takes place after Ella is swept off in a carriage to live in the palace. Once she gets there, however, the perfect Prince Charming actually turns out to be Prince Dreary. Ella gets sick of it pretty quickly and has to find a way to escape—and from the dungeon, too, where she has been placed for unladylike behavior.

Shannon Hale’s The Goose Girl breathes a lot of life into the old fairytale, especially the new idea of wind-speak, although I found the beginning just a tad slow. Once past there, the book becomes a delightful and easy read (the sequels, Enna Burning and River Secrets, are also really good, but they move on to different plots than fairytales). Ms. Hale’s forthcoming Book of a Thousand Days is based on the little-known Brothers Grimm tale, Maid Maleen. I am not familiar with the story, nor is there much information about the book online, but I’m sure Shannon Hale will give readers another expertly woven plot and flowing narration.

Patrice Kindl creates a sort of fairytale-collage in Goose Chase; the beautiful Alexandria was formerly a goose girl and is now locked in a tower while two suitors fight over her. With the help of her twelve geese, Alexandria escapes the tower only to be tried by trolls, an evil baroness, and the foolishness of Prince Edmund of Dorloo. The plot is fast-paced and funny, but there are a few too many “by my troths!” in my opinion.

I don’t think there are many people in the world who haven’t seen—or at least heard of—The Princess Bride, but I’ll throw it in here anyway. The movie is the classic type of fairy story, including an evil prince, a captured princess, a giant, and Rodents of Unusual Size. If you haven’t watched it yet, I sincerely recommend that you do so. Maybe some of you don’t know of the novel on which the movie was based, The Princess Bride, by William Goldman.

More YA Fairytales:

Beauty Sleep, by Cameron Dokey
Before Midnight, by Cameron Dokey
Beast, by Donna Jo Napoli
Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister: A Novel, by Gregory Maguire
Crazy Jack, by Donna Jo Napoli
Fairest, by Gail Carson Levine
Golden, by Cameron Dokey
The Magic Circle, by Donna Jo Napoli
Midnight Pearls, by Debbie Viguié
Mira, Mirror, by Mette Harrison
The Night Dance, by Suzanne Weyn
The Phoenix Dance, by Dia Calhoun
The Rose and the Beast, by Francesca Lia Block
The Rose Bride: A Re-Telling of the White and Black Bride, by Nancy Holder
The Rumpelstiltskin Problem, by Vivian Vande Velde
Rose Daughter, by Robin McKinley
Scarlet Moon, by Debbie Viguié
Snow, by Tracy Lyn
Spindle’s End, by Robin McKinley
Spinners, by Donna Jo Napoli
Spirited, by Nancy Holder
The Storyteller’s Daughter, by Cameron Dokey
The Swan Maiden, by Heather Tomlinson
Water Song, by Suzanne Weyn
Zel, by Donna Jo Napoli

Juvenile Fairytale Retellings:

Beauty, by Robin McKinley
Ella Enchanted, by Gail Carson Levine
Rapunzel, the One with All the Hair, by Wendy Mass
Tales from the Brothers Grimm and the Sisters Weird, by Vivian Vande Velde
The Door in the Hedge, by Robin McKinley
The Frog Prince, Continued, by Jon Scieszka
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The Frog Princess
Dragon’s Breath
Once Upon a Curse
No Place for Magic
The Salamander Spell, by E.D. Baker

Monday, June 4, 2007

Bridge to Terabithia

Director: Gabor Csupo
Genre: Adventure/drama/family/fantasy
Rated PG for thematic elements including bullying, some peril and mild language
Starring Josh Hutcherson and AnnaSophia Robb

When I first saw the trailer for this movie I was shocked; What had they done to such a great story?! It didn’t look anything like the touching tale of friendship the novel tells. But, after reading positive reviews from others who had also enjoyed the book, I decided to go see for myself—and was pleasantly surprised.

Jesse Oliver Aarons, Jr. has been training all summer to be the fastest kid in the fifth grade, but that dream is crushed when the new girl, Leslie Burke, beats all the boys on the first day of school. At first Jess is against Leslie, both for beating him and for being weird, but then he figures, “Why shouldn’t I talk to her?” and a strong friendship develops. The two create Terabithia, a secret magical kingdom in the woods where they are free from bullies and worries, and where their imagination is boundless. Leslie finally has a friend, and Jess learns how to daydream. But a sudden catastrophe shatters Terabithia, and Jess wonders if it can ever be rebuilt again.
The movie adaptation sticks close to the main plot of the book, with only a few minutes of CGI—which is to show you what the characters see—and AnnaSophia Robb is the perfect Leslie, with her friendly smile and large sparkling eyes. Although I thought the animation took away from the quiet power that is captured in the novel, Bridge to Terabithia was a good movie and very worth watching for all ages.

Thursday, May 24, 2007

Friday, May 11, 2007

The Falcon

by Jackie French Koller

Luke Carver has a secret is a normal teenaged boy who thinks his parents are overprotective. When his teacher gives him an assignment to keep a journal of his thoughts or write about a significant event, Luke is surprised how many pages he dashes off—although he doesn’t believe his thoughts are particularly deep. Mostly he writes about his girlfriend, Megan, and how his parents worry about him constantly. They worry when he wrestles, drives a car, or climbs The Top-o’-the-World without safety gear. But what Luke likes is the rush of adrenaline that makes him feel alive, that makes him feel whole. I like how, as the story progresses, there are glimpses of something below the surface, something that makes Luke different, but you can’t quite tell what it is. Slowly, Luke comes to terms with his past, and at the same time, the reader discovers the deepest part of Luke’s problems.
The Falcon is a very real and touching story about bringing your most secret feelings into the light for better or for worse.

Wednesday, May 9, 2007

Here Today

by Ann M. Martin

Eleanor Roosevelt Dingman lives with her family on Witch Tree Lane in Spectacle, New York, and the year is 1963. The people of Witch Tree Lane are considered odd, so rocks are thrown through windows, Holly Major’s cat is poisoned, and the Witch Tree itself is painted lavender. It was the year that President Kennedy was assassinated, and the girls at Ellie’s school decide that Ellie and her best friend, Holly, are weird, and should be “slammed”; pushed and shoved as hard as possible against the walls and lockers. Ellie’s family’s own relationships begin to break up, and her mother, Doris Day Dingman, goes to New York City, leaving her children behind, along with her husband, in their small hometown of Spectacle. Slowly, Ellie’s life and family begins to fall apart. Her father is away all day trying to earn money for his family, and Ellie is the only one left to take care of her brother and sister, Albert Einstein and Marie Curie. Can Ellie manage all her responsibilities, and will her mother ever come back?

Sunday, April 29, 2007

Annie, Between the States

by L.M. Elliot

Annie Sinclair lived a life of peace and serenity until the beginning of the Civil War, when the Yankees invaded her southern homeland. Annie is frustrated that she must stay around the house and bandage men with horrible wounds instead of attending parties and balls like a young lady usually would. With her older brother Laurence fighting in the war, and a hot-headed Yankee-hating younger brother, Annie is her mother’s right-hand during the many trials they face throughout the war; it is she who uses her wit and courage to help her family and the way of life they believe in. When she meets the romantic, Shakespeare-quoting Captain Farley, Annie is swept off her feet, but is troubled by the handsome northern-born Thomas Walker who keeps popping into her life. Will her family and loved ones survive the war? And if they do, will they ever be the same again?

L.M. Elliot weaves Annie’s thoughts and feelings into the narration so seamlessly that I kept forgetting that it is written in third person—and that the characters weren’t real people.
Annie, Between the States is a wonderful historical novel set in Manassas Virginia and the surrounding areas that fans of Ann Rinaldi will love, and even people who aren’t history lovers might find interesting.

****Also posted on YA Books Central.****

Monday, April 23, 2007

Much Ado About Shakespeare

On this day in the year 1564, a boy named William Shakespeare was born to a glover and his wife. Little did they know that he would come to be known as “The Swan of Avon,” the “Bard of Avon,” or just “the Bard.” How could anyone guess how famous his plays and sonnets would become? They have been translated into all languages and influence and permeate our modern culture in a thousand ways. Below is an article on novels that I hope will bring a new view to anyone who finds Shakespeare’s works hard to read or “boring,” and give fans another way to enjoy his wit and humor.

Eleven-year-old Nat Field has been chosen to perform in an all-boy a production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream at the new replica of the Globe Theatre. Nat is thrilled, but when he arrives in London he begins to feel dizzy and smell strange smells. Falling ill one night, Nat awakes in a strange room, and soon realizes that he’s in Shakespeare’s time as another Nat Field who is also playing Puck at the newly built Globe. Susan Cooper does an exceptional job with King of Shadows, pulling you into the 1590’s along with Nat and leaving you to wonder, along with Nat, whether he traveled through time or not.

Ariel, by Grace Tiffany was pretty weird. It’s a retelling of The Tempest, the main character being the self-centered sprite, Ariel. The characters have the same names, but their personalities as well as the events of the story are changed around quite a lot. I found it interesting and unusual, but not one of my favorite retellings.

In Ophelia, Lisa M. Klein reveals another side to Hamlet, which begins long before, leaves off far past the end, and delves much deeper into the entire play. A different kind of Ophelia is brought out, too, one who isn’t just a girl mad with lost lover’s grief, but an interesting, strong, and smart young woman. As you can probably tell, I found it excellent.

Carolyn Meyer’s Loving Will Shakespeare is unique; telling the story of Anne Hathaway, a young woman who dreams of finding love. Though she is eight years his senior, Anne has always had a soft spot for Master Shakespeare, a bright youth she has known from birth. And the little boy himself has given her several childish signs of affection, but though they are teased, no one thinks much of it. Anne soon becomes betrothed and plans to be happily married, however when disaster strikes, her life is changed immensely. I like how Ms. Meyer gives real personality to a woman who is not known for her own achievements but those of a male relation. After I read it I thought, “Wow, Anne was a living person, too, not just ‘Shakespeare’s wife.’”

Younger readers will enjoy Swan Town: The Secret Journal of Susanna Shakespeare, which is narrated by Shakespeare’s eldest daughter. Susanna is an amateur playwright and longs for adventure and for her play, The Parrot’s King, to be performed. When her uncle Ned gets in trouble, will she have the chance to save the day and have some excitement? It was good but not great, and the Shakespearean insults were just a little too common. I think I would have enjoyed it more if I had read it between the ages of 10 and 13 or so.

The Two Loves of Will Shakespeare, by Laurie Lawlor, is based on the record of a Will Shakespeare registered to marry an Anne Whatley the day before his marriage to Anne Hathaway. In this novel, Will is torn between two women; the sweet, pious, and golden-haired Anne Whately and the dark-haired, bold, and “experienced” Anne Hathaway. Will he choose for love or must he marry only to clear up a trouble? I thought it was interesting and easy enough to read, but not especially wonderful.

Gary Blackwood’s trilogy—The Shakespeare Stealer, Shakespeare’s Scribe, and Shakespeare’s Spy—was brilliant. The beginning of the first book’s a bit slow, but it picks up soon and takes you for a whirling ride through Elizabethan London. An orphan boy, Widge (shortened from “pigwidgeon”), is chosen to be taught “charactery,” a kind of writing so easy to write that one can pen words as fast as another speaks. Once he has learned that, Widge is sent to the Globe to listen and steal the text of Mr. Shakespeare’s plays. To construct the text completely, Widge must return again and again, and soon gets to know some of the actors. As he does, Widge dreams of becoming an actor himself.

Twelfth Night: Or What You Will is definitely one of my favorite movies. The story is about identical twins, Viola and Sebastian, who are separated in a shipwreck and end up on the shores of Illyria. Viola dresses as a boy, taking the name Cesario, and goes to work as a servant of Duke Orsino, then falling in love with him. Orsino, however, loves Olivia, a countess who has sworn to allow no man inside her gate for seven years hence. Eventually Sebastian, too, finds his way to the Duke’s court, and one of the Bard’s classic tales of mixed-up identities and double weddings ensues. The casting is very well done (Ben Kingsley makes a more subtle but interesting fool), and being set in the 19th century does not take anything away from the story.

Kenneth Branagh has made some excellent films of Shakespeare’s plays, including Hamlet, Much Ado About Nothing, Henry V, and Love’s Labour’s Lost. I would really like to see his newest production, As You Like It, which is set in a fairytale-like Japan, but it seems that it will not be widely released in the US.

For modern film retellings, check out 10 Things I Hate About You (based on The Taming of the Shrew), and She’s the Man (a varsity soccer-themed version of Twelfth Night). I have not seen either of them, but I think 10 Things I Hate About You sticks closer to the original story, and She’s the Man looks like a funny and slightly stupid chick flick. It was funny to see young guys driving cars and wearing Hawaiian shirts while speaking the text from Shakespeare’s play in Romeo + Juliet. It was rather violent, though, and at times rather odd. I have not seen it in a long time, but I remember liking A Midsummer Night’s Dream (set in a historic Athens with bicycles). Puck and Bottom were very good.

Other Shakespeare Books for YA Readers:

Dating Hamlet: Ophelias Story, by Lisa Fiedler
Enter Three Witches: A Story of Macbeth, by Caroline B. Cooney
The Juliet Club, by Suzanne Harper
Romeo’s Ex: Rosaline’s Story, by Lisa Fiedler
Saving Juliet, by Suzanne Selfors
Shakespeare’s Daughter, by Peter W. Hassinger
Shylock’s Daughter, by Mirjam Pressler
-
The Playmaker
The True Prince, by J.B. Cheany

Thursday, April 5, 2007

John Marsden’s Tomorrow Series

When Ellie Linton and her friends go on a camping trip during the Commemoration Day celebration, they have no idea it will keep them from becoming prisoners in their own country. While the rest of the town is at the Showground celebrating, another country invaded Australia, taking over everything and everything. Ellie and her friends—Robyn, Kevin, Corrie, Lee, Homer, Fi, and Chris—decide that the must do something to loosen the invader’s grasp on their country and families—even if it means killing people. But what can eight teenagers really do to sabotage the enemy’s plans, stay hidden, and most of importantly, stay alive? Tomorrow, When the War Began is a gripping, suspenseful novel with very genuine characters, which at times is so real it’s spooky.

In the sequel series, The Ellie Chronicles, Ellie must learn to fight a new kind of war; a battle to keep her farm, the land she loves, and to survive after her parents are killed by enemy soldiers. This brings a new and different focus to the story but still centering on the same familiar characters.I must warn you, though, that if you begin reading these books you may suffer from sleep deprivation. This is a very well written and suspenseful series and staying up all night to can see what happens next is quite likely

Note: I would not recommend this series for most teens under the age of 14 due to mature content matter.

The Tomorrow Series:

Tomorrow, When the War Began
The Dead of Night
A Killing Frost
Darkness Be My Friend
Burning for Revenge
The Night is for Hunting
The Other Side of Dawn

The Ellie Chronicles:

While I Live
Incurable
Circle of Flight (unknown US release)

Monday, March 19, 2007

Faeries

Fairies have always fascinated me, ever since I was a little kid. So of course I’d want to read about them. There are some really terrific books about the Wee Folk, so if you’re interested, read on....

Probably my favorite fairy book is Herbie Brennan’s Faerie Wars, followed by The Purple Emperor, Ruler of the Realm, and Faerie Lord. These sci-fi type books are about Henry Atherton, a boy who’s just found out his parents are divorcing and is having a hard time about it. He starts working for Mr. Fogarty, an old man in the neighborhood, and one day he discovers a fairy named Pyrgus in the shed, which starts many adventures for the teenager. These books are terrific, and although Faerie Wars starts a little slow, it picks up pretty fast. The characters are great and the plotline has plenty of adventurous escapes, as well as personal struggles and funny moments. I’ve read the series too many times to count, and I can n ever decide which book I like best!

Another series I’ve been enjoying is the Chronicles of Faerie by O. R. Melling. They’re more of the Celtic, old-fashioned fairy kind, which I also love. The first book is titled The Hunter’s Moon, and follows the story of a young girl named Gwen, who goes to visit her friend Findabhair in Ireland. Almost as soon as they get there, however, Findabhair is stolen by the King of the Faeries and taken away to live with him in the Faerie Court. Gwen is thrown into an adventure she didn’t count on, trying to save her dear friend from living forever with the Faeries. Next in the series come The Summer King, The Light-Bearer’s Daughter, and The Book of Dreams. So far I have only read the first two, and although I liked The Hunter’s Moon, The Summer King was even better. These books have all the elements that make a great novel; magic, mystery, adventure, and even a bit of romance.

Recently I also read The Faerie Path by Frewin Jones, which I found to be a little disappointing but still readable. Sixteen-year-old Anita Palmer is on a boating trip with her boyfriend, Evan, when everything goes wrong and the boat crashes. Anita wakes up in the hospital to find that Evan is in a coma, but after finding some mysterious gifts she is transported into the land of Faerie, where she discovers that she’s actually the missing daughter of King Oberon and Queen Titania. Although this novel looks appealing and it does have somewhat of a good storyline, I was a bit irritated by the forced-seeming, old-fashioned way the faeries talked and the strange way the humans talked. However, if you like fantasies/fairy tales, this book does have its good points. Also read The Lost Queen and The Sorcerer King, books two and three in the series.


FairyTale: A True Story is about the only good movie about fairies, in my opinion. I’ve had the VHS tape for a long time and used to love it when I was little. I still like it. It’s an in-depth story of the Case of the Cotingley Fairies, when two girls photographed fairies with their father’s camera.



And last but certainly not least, are the Old Oak Wood books by Wendy Froud and Terri Windling. In book one—A Midsummer Night’s Faery Tale—everyone in the wood is getting ready for Midsummer’s Eve, which is a time of great celebration. Sneezlewort Rootmuster Rowanberry Boggs VII, a small tree root faery, is feeling useless because he doesn’t think he’s good for anything. But Sneezle might be more useful than he ever imagined, when Queen Titania’s crown needs fetching.... Though this is technically a picture book, it is not the kind suitable only for five-year-olds. It has a good, fairly long story as well as exquisite illustrations of the dolls made by Wendy Froud. Along with Terri Windling’s excellent writing and storyline, it results in a wonderful book that I would recommend to all ages. The other books in the series are titled The Winter Child and The Faeries of Spring Cottage.

Other Young Adult Fairy Books:

Wicked Lovely, by Melissa Marr
Valiant: A Modern Tale of Faerie, by Holly Black
The Blue Girl, by Charles de Lint
The Fairy Rebel, by Lynne Reid Banks
The Faery Reel: Tales from the Twilight Realm, by Ellen Datlow & Terri Windling
The Turning, by Gillian Chan
--
Tithe: A Modern Faerie Tale
Ironside: A Modern Faery’s Tale, by Holly Black
--
Lady Cottington’s Pressed Fairy Letters
Lady Cottington’s Pressed Fairy Book, by Brian Froud & Terry Jones

For Younger Readers:

Fairy Dust, by Jane Denitz Smith
Beck and the Great Berry Battle, by Laura Driscoll & Judith H. Clarke
The Faery Flag: Stories and Poems of Fantasy and the Supernatural, by Jane Yolen

The Fairy School Series by Gail Herman:

Tooth Fairy Travels
Fairy Cloud Parade
Mixed-Up Magic
The Best Book Ever!
Look Out, Earth-Below!
Little Star
When Wishes Come True
Hide and Peep
A Fairy Merry Christmas
The Icicle Forest

The Fairy Realm Series by Emily Rodda:

The Charm Bracelet
The Flower Fairies
The Third Wish
The Last Fairy-Apple Tree
The Magic Key
The Unicorn
The Star Cloak
The Water Sprites
The Peskie Spell
The Rainbow Wand

Pixie Tricks by Tracey West:

Sprite’s Secret
The Greedy Gremlin
The Pet-Store Sprite
Halloween Goblin
The Angry Elf
The Sporty Sprite
Double Trouble Dwarfs
The Wicked Wizard

The Fairy Lair Books by Anne C. Lemieux:

A Special Place
A Magic Place
A Hidden Place

Saturday, March 10, 2007

Fantasy I’ve Enjoyed Recently



Secret Sacrament
Time of the Eagle
, by Sherryl Jordan







Avielle of Rhia, by Dia Calhoun





The Hollow Kingdom Trilogy
, by Clare B. Dunkle

The Hollow Kingdom
Close Kin
In the Coils of the Snake


Wren Series
, by Sherwood Smith


Wren to the Rescue
Wren’s Quest
Wren
’s War
Wren Journeymage (not yet released)





Murkmere
Ambergate, by Patricia Elliot



Magic or Madness Trilogy, by Justine Larbalestier


Magic or Madness
Magic Lessons
Magic’s Child