Richard Due's Blog: Delusions of Grandeur? - Posts Tagged "review"
'It is an addictive drug for those of us who have lovingly flipped through its pages. It is the fantastical story you dreamed of while waiting to fall asleep. It is youth brought to life.' --from review of The Dragondain
Published on June 30, 2013 04:52
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Tags:
5-stars, fantasy, jen-s-closet, moon-realm, review, series, the-dragondain, the-moon-coin
The Moon Coin “charming and clever and beautiful and daring”
A Perfect Tales-Told-By-the-Fire Book
By Tricia Rightmire
I’ve been working on how to phrase this review for a while, but I sit down planning to sound all clever and erudite and end up getting all wistful and making lots of hands-over-my-heart gestures at the screen, so I think this time I’m just going to go with that. . . .
The Moon Coin is lovely, folks. It is charming and clever and beautiful and daring; it’s full of adventure and surprises and courage and puzzles and characters with whom I fell immediately and permanently in love. It’s written with a younger audience in mind—think “older elementary school, some middle schoolers”—but it’s the sort of book that just begs for a blanket and some comfy pillows and a crackling fire on the hearth, with everyone piled in together and hearing about far-off lands full of faeries and dragons and cats big enough to ride (they get really crabby about that, though, so I don’t recommend trying it). It doesn’t shy away from big words or complex ideas, but couches them all in a universe that’s so rich and consuming that they’re not “too hard” . . . and it’s just. so. fun.
The downside is that it’s the first of an as-yet uncompleted series, so you can’t just sit down and binge-read through them all; the upside is that every minute in this world is delicious and grand, and makes you want nothing more than to have your own Moon Coin so you can go adventuring. Grab the youngsters who mean the most to you, settle in, and enjoy!
By Tricia Rightmire
I’ve been working on how to phrase this review for a while, but I sit down planning to sound all clever and erudite and end up getting all wistful and making lots of hands-over-my-heart gestures at the screen, so I think this time I’m just going to go with that. . . .
The Moon Coin is lovely, folks. It is charming and clever and beautiful and daring; it’s full of adventure and surprises and courage and puzzles and characters with whom I fell immediately and permanently in love. It’s written with a younger audience in mind—think “older elementary school, some middle schoolers”—but it’s the sort of book that just begs for a blanket and some comfy pillows and a crackling fire on the hearth, with everyone piled in together and hearing about far-off lands full of faeries and dragons and cats big enough to ride (they get really crabby about that, though, so I don’t recommend trying it). It doesn’t shy away from big words or complex ideas, but couches them all in a universe that’s so rich and consuming that they’re not “too hard” . . . and it’s just. so. fun.
The downside is that it’s the first of an as-yet uncompleted series, so you can’t just sit down and binge-read through them all; the upside is that every minute in this world is delicious and grand, and makes you want nothing more than to have your own Moon Coin so you can go adventuring. Grab the youngsters who mean the most to you, settle in, and enjoy!
Published on October 15, 2014 04:35
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Tags:
book-review, fantasy, illustrated, illustration, mg, middle-grade, review, reviews, richard-due, series, the-moon-coin, the-moon-realm, tricia-rightmire, ya, young-adult
IndieReader Loves Idiot Genius

The staff over at IndieReader had some very nice things to say about Idiot Genius: Willa Snap and the Clockwerk Boy
"Abducted into a secret world, eleven-year-old Willa Snap takes readers on an imaginative journey through a place filled with mechanical people and fantastical machines. There’s wit and passion in the dialogue as . . ."
Full blurb here: https://indiereader.com/2019/01/idiot...
Published on January 20, 2019 07:36
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Tags:
artemis, castle, catherynne, children, city, clock, clockwerk, dragons, events, fowl, gaiman, games, hollow, house, howl, hunger, indiereader, jackson, lemoncello, leviathan, library, memory, moving, nevermoor, peculiar, penderwicks, percy, review, riordan, rowling, serafina, series, shusterman, steampunk, teen, time, tween, unfortunate, walls, wrinkle
LitPick Reviews Willa Snap
Willa Snap and the Clockwerk Boy is a charming epic of how a normal girl is whisked into an adventure beyond her wildest dreams. . . . [more]

Published on February 26, 2019 04:46
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Tags:
5-star, adult, artemis, award, book, colfer, eoin, fiction, fowl, gaiman, genius, grade, harry, idiot, illustrated, jackson, litpick, mg, mglit, middle, neil, percy, potter, review, sci-fi, science, scifi, snap, steampunk, student, teen, tween, willa, ya, yalit, young
Willa Snap and the Clockwerk Boy
Your mother’s identified as an Idiot Genius, your family’s abducted to a strange new city—for safekeeping—and now your timeline’s in danger. What’s an ingenious 11-year-old to do?
99 cents, limited time.
Published on September 08, 2019 06:23
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Tags:
artemis, castle, catherynne, children, city, clock, clockwerk, dragons, events, fowl, gaiman, games, hollow, house, howl, hunger, indiereader, jackson, lemoncello, leviathan, library, memory, moving, nevermoor, peculiar, penderwicks, percy, review, riordan, rowling, serafina, series, shusterman, steampunk, teen, time, tween, unfortunate, walls, wrinkle