The Unicorn in the Barn

Unicorn barn

 

 

 

 

Eric Harper’s grandma has been moved into a nursing home. Her home has been sold to help with expenses and Eric is having a hard time adjusting to that reality.  After all, the Harper’s have owned this land for as far back as Eric can recall. They’ve loved it and protected it. However, when he learns the new owner, a veterinarian, helps magical creatures, he decides he can learn to adjust. And when he is offered a job caring for some of the creatures he is overjoyed. The trick for him will be to learn how to get along with bossy Allegra, the veterinarian’s daughter.

As the story unfolds we see a hard won understanding and friendship develop between Allegra and Eric. They work together to try to restore grandma’s health. Did you know unicorn hair had healing powers? Neither did they until grandma picked a few stray unicorn hairs off of Eric and soon thereafter had movement in a once feeble hand.

Ogburn delves into the topics of death, loyalty, bravery, just treatment of all living creatures and friendship. The dialog at times seems a little stilted or dated, but savvy readers should be able to adjust. The overall story line is about natural consequences and Ogburn handles the topic well with just enough emphasis without overdoing it.

There’s a surprise at the end of the book that astute readers may guess at midway through.

A first person tale, told in eleven year old Eric’s voice, this realistic fantasy will have the reader wanting more. A sweet story with a little sadness. With a possibility for a sequel.

unicorn barn pic

Thornghost

This fantasy transports Niklas Summerhill to Nightmare territory where animals walk and talk and are where there is battle waged between good and evil. Niklas is accompanied by a talking lynx who fulfils the role of companion and protector.  This is a dark story between good and evil. It does not stand alone easily.  It should be read as a sequel to The Twistrose Key to provide the backstory of Niklas’ mother’s adventures with the petlings and wildlings of nightmare territory.  

Purchase if you have strong fantasy readers who are looking for a new animal adventure or if you have a strong readership for The Twistrose Key.

The Mysterious Woods of Whistle Root

The debut novel by Christopher Pennell,  The Mysterious Woods of Whistle Root,  is a perfect read-aloud or a read alone for the intended audience. It is a tale of magic and friendship that captivates from the very first sentence:
“In a small town called Whistle Root, rats play music in the moonlight.”   From that beginning, nothing that comes later can be too strange to be believed and really makes for a fun, refreshing fantasy.

The rats play music from the rooftops so the owls can dance. There are vegetables appearing on rooftops, of which one character comments: “ I notice that you have a squash on your roof, dear. How lovely. I only have broccoli”.  Rats talk and fly on breezes, mysterious messages appear inside a hat that is in a wooden crib in the middle of the woods, strange whispers can place people in a deep sleep and an unique beast appears who likes to adorn himself with owl feathers. It may have been difficult to pull off the sorts of unusual happenings found in this book, but Pennell does it with entertaining ease. He presents the activities and events so casually and deftly that it becomes very easy for the reader to accept them as a natural part of this odd, wonderful world.

The main character is Carly Bean Bitters, a young girl who can only sleep during the day and no one knows why. She is lonely as all children are awake when Carly is asleep. One magical night that all changes when Carly becomes friends with Lewis, a violin-playing rat.  Lewis has lost two members of his musical trio. When a member is missing from the band a vegetable stands in “for you must always have exactly three members.” Lewis already has a squash on Carly’s rooftop but Lewis proclaims that “ it would be too embarrassing to have two vegetables in the band and (the squash is a lousy drummer)”. So he asks Carly to join his group.

Soon after, Carly and Lewis become friends with Green. He is a boy who lives with his grandmother underneath the school.  Green has a hidden door to his house in a little used, dark area of the school library – the reference section. The three friends set out to uncover the reason for the strange change in behavior among the owls in Whistle Woods.  They had always danced to the rats’ music, but now they hunt them instead. Also, Green’s grandma has fallen into a sleep from which she cannot be awakened. Carly and Green are willing to do what is needed to get Grandma back and restore the once peaceful owl and rat relationship. Unraveling the mysteries will help restore everything to “normal”.

The illustrations by Rebecca Bond are charming pen and ink doodlings that complement the text.  My first response at seeing the illustrations was disappointment.  In our flashy, colorful world I expected the same for the illustrations.  However,  I realized as I became acquainted with the book that the media choice really was perfect.  Pennell provides a wonderful description and Bond provides a nice framework for readers to use their own creative imagination to fill in the color and detail. In the end I thought it was a wise choice.

Others have compared this novel to  The Dreamstealer by Sid Fleischman with its storyteller’s voice and the extravagance of its imagination, and Kenneth Grahme, C.S. Lewis, E.B. White and  Kate DiCamillo for its well-imagined talking animals… just to name a few.

It has just the right blend of mystery and scary with a fairy tale ending.
I’m a truly hoping that this will be a series, as I would love to get lost in the world of Whistle Root again and again.

Dragonbreath: Revenge of the Horned Bunnies

Danny Dragonbreath is excited about going to summer camp this year.  That is until he finds out his younger cousin, Spencer, is going too. The disappointing news is tempered by the fact that his two best friends,Wendell and Christiana, will be going too. Things start looking up even more when the group has a mystery to solve.  Who is stealing the jackalopes from the camp?

A mix of graphic novel and heavily illustrated text, this series is a student favorite. Funny, witty and an imaginative escape.  Highly recommended.