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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: a world without heroes, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Three Amazing Adventures

The Door in the Forest, by Roderick Townley (Knopf, $16.99, ages 9-12, 245 pages) Daniel has long hunted for a way through the thorny thickets and quicksand that guard a forbidden island near his home in Everwood, but it isn't until he befriends a mysterious orphan named Emily Byrdsong that he discovers how important the island really is. Emily, as it turns out, is the granddaughter of a strangely lovable witch-woman named Bridey, part of a long line of Byrdsongs who've guarded the island's secrets. Until now, no one has gotten passed the creeks of poisonous snakes that encircle it. But now a crazed commander named Sloper has stormed into town in and is accusing the villagers of a hiding weapons on the island, and suddenly Bridey has disappeared. Could Sloper be behind her disappearance and why is he firing rounds into the forest? It's up to Daniel and his brother Wesley to help Emily find Bridey and save the island, but first they'll have to outwit Sloper and decode an ancient map. Will Daniel's habit of blurting out the truth make things worse? It may take a lesson in "Lefty Lucy, Righty Tighty" and literally the freckles on Emily's back to get them safely across the creeks of poisonous snakes and find a hidden door to the island. But why would any place be so isolated and if they can get there, could the commander too? It isn't called the Impossible Island for nothing. Townley's writing is filled with descriptive gems (trees "tall and thin, like tuning forks") and so imaginative I was halfway done before I looked up.

A World Without Heroes (Beyonders Book 1), by Brandon Mull (Simon & Schuster, $19.99, ages 8-12, 464 pages, 2011). While cleaning the hippo tank at the zoo where he volunteers, Jason Walker falls through a portal into a strange and troubled world ruled by a malicious wizard emperor. Lyrian is like nowhere on Earth. As he searches for a way to get back home, he stumbles upon a hidden repository in the woods, where a forbidden tome is preserved in a scribe's flesh. Though cautioned by the repository's loremaster (librarian) not to open the book, Jason cannot resist the temptation and upon reading it, is unwittingly nominated to depose the emperor, Maldor. Unless Jason, with the help of his new ally Rachel, can uncover all of the syllables of a magical word that can destroy Maldor, he'll be executed. First he'll have to find the Blind King and outsmart brave resisters who've been bought off or broken by Maldor. From the author of the best-selling Fablehaven series comes the first book in a fantastic new adventure that reads like a great movie.

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2. Book Review: Beyonders

Beyonders cover Book Review: Beyonders Beyonders: A World Without Heroes by Brandon Mull

Review by: Chris Singer

About the author:

Brandon Mull resides in a happy little valley near the mouth of a canyon with his wife and three children. He spent two years living in the Atacama Desert of Northern Chile where he learned Spanish and juggling. He once won a pudding eating contest in the park behind his grandma’s house, earning a gold medal. Brandon is the author of the New York Times bestselling Fablehaven series and The Candy Shop War.

About the book:

Jason Walker has often wished his life could be less predictable—until a routine day at the zoo ends with Jason suddenly transporting from the hippo tank into a strange, imperiled world. Lyrian holds dangers and challenges unlike anyplace Jason has ever known. The people all live in fear of their malicious wizard emperor, Maldor. The brave resistors who once opposed the emperor have been bought off or broken, leaving a realm where fear and suspicion prevail.

In his search for a way home, Jason meets Rachel, who was also mysteriously drawn to Lyrian from our world. With the help of a few scattered rebels, Jason and Rachel become entangled in a quest to piece together the word of power that can destroy the emperor and learn that their best hope to find a way home will be to save this world without heroes.

My take on the book:

Brandon Mull’s Beyonders is the latest addition to an already crowded fantasy genre for middle readers. Seasoned readers of fantasy will definitely recognize Beyonders theme of a hero’s journey, and has many elements reminiscent of some classic fantasy stories such as Tolkien’s The Hobbit and Homer’s Odyssey.

Beyonders is packed with action from the get-go. Middle readers will be engaged immediately by the circumstances in which Jason finds himself. Thirteen-year-old Jason takes on challenge after challenge and lives up to the billing of a hero throughout. Although I found myself rolling my eyes over Jason’s good fortune in overcoming these challenges (he’s only 13!!), middle readers will still enjoy this fast-moving adventure, which despite the length of the book (over 450 pages), finds each chapter moving along quickly.

Beyonders has good messages for young readers as bravery, self-worth and determination are characteristics of many of the story’s heroes and their allies. Despite being thrust into a world devoid of bravery and heroes, Jason’s high quality of character helps attract the few people who wish to stand up to Maldor.

Throughout the adventure, Jason is paired with another “Beyonder,” Rachel, who happened upon the world of Lyrian in a similarly bizarre incident. Despite Jason’s pairing with Rachel, there isn’t the same sort of equal billing given to her. This may turn off female readers as Rachel is pretty consistently left behind in much of the story, often forced to stay out of sight in the paranoid and suspicious world of Lyrian due to her being a girl. As Beyonder

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