The
Stones of Ravenglass (Chronicles of the Red King, Book 2), by Jenny Nimmo
(Scholastic, June 1, 2012, ages 8 and up).
Long before the story of
Charlie Bone began, a boy named Timoken fled from his African home, protected by
strong magic from the supernatural enemies who killed his parents, and who seek
to destroy him. The first part of Timoken's adventures is told in The
Secret Kingdom, in which he finds new friends (including a lovely camel,
with whom he flies through the air, and three magical leopards, as well as human
companions), looses his sister, and survives attempts to kill him.
In
The Stones of Ravenglass, Timoken's hope
that he and his companions have found a safe haven in a British castle are
shattered by the evil machinations of its steward, and Timoken is imprisoned. He
and a mysterious wizard (along with Gabar, the camel) escape...and Timoken sets
off on a new quest.
This time, instead of looking for refuge, Timoken
will build one--a place where he and his friends can be truly safe. But in a
war-torn land, safety is hard to come by...even when a friendly dragon joins
your cause.
This series is, I think, extremely well suited for children
on the younger side of the "middle grade" spectrum--third and fourth graders. As
with the first book, there's a fairytale feel to it, a sense of events unfolding
in a somewhat episodic way, a story told to the reader as if it happened long
ago. It's a story filled with magic--rather miraculous magic, coming from a
source external to the main character, in fairytale fashion.
In the first
book, I felt somewhat distanced from Timoken as a person--here that distance is
lessened, but he still seemed to me "the hero of the story" rather than a fully
developed character. I think that although this might not be what I as a grown
up am looking for, this might make him a very appealing hero for the younger
reader--I imagine it would be very easy for such a reader to step into his
shoes, and trill to his adventures.
And those adventures, although not on
the grand and sweeping scale of the previous book (which might be a
disappointment to that one's readers), have exciting moments of great magic
(literally), and the ensemble cast of camel, kids, wizard, and dragon work well
together to create an interesting story.
In short: a good one for its
target audience, though not one I'd insist that the five or so grown-ups I know
of who visit here looking for books for themselves (you know who you are!) get a
hold of for their personal reading pleasure.
And yay! for an African boy
hero, shown as such on the cover. 2012 has been a year in which multicultural
speculative fantasy and science fiction seems especially thin on the ground (I
have only encountered 2, besides this one*), and so I hope it does really
well.
(disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher)
*In
case anyone is curious, these are The
Book of Wonders, by Jasmine Richards and Chitty
Chitty Bang Bang Flies Again, by Frank Cottrell Boyce. Please let me know of
any others you've read!
By Way of Introduction
This blog gathers together my reviews of speculative fiction books for kids and teens in which the central protagonists are multicultural. The reviews were originally published at my main blog, Charlotte's Library. I'm adding labels (a rather fraught process), so that people can find specific diversities...doubtless I"ll be tweeking them as I go.
This blog is a work in progress--I have well over 100 more reviews already written to add to it, and I hope I'll add many more new books, interviews, and other content about diverse books!
(also to come are links to other websites and blogs....)
This blog is a work in progress--I have well over 100 more reviews already written to add to it, and I hope I'll add many more new books, interviews, and other content about diverse books!
(also to come are links to other websites and blogs....)
Thursday, May 1, 2014
Chronicles of the Red King Book 2--The Stones of Ravenglass, by Jenny Nimmo
Labels:
African,
middle grade
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