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Paperback Fairy Rebel Book

ISBN: 0380706504

ISBN13: 9780380706501

Fairy Rebel

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

The Fairy Queen strictly forbids fairies from using their magic power on humans. But after Tiki accidentally meets Jan, a woman who is desperate for a baby daughter, she finds it impossible to resist... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Finally found this book after years of searching!

I read this book more than once when I was in elementary school. Over the years, I lost the title and have been searching everywhere for it. I'm so excited to see it's reprinted and still out there for kids to read. I'm also surprised to find out it's by one of my favorite childhood authors. I loved "The Indian in the Cupboard" as well. I would recommend this to any child, or adult, who loves fantasy. There are some parts that are a little scary if I remember correctly though. I still have to reread it : )

Charming, simple, a la Mary Poppins--it will make you smile!

Don't be fooled by the slim length and simple, straightforward telling of this story-- this is a treat for adults as well as for children. The simplicity of the storytelling reminds me of the Mary Poppins books-- there's more here than meets the eye.I especially love that the story begins by telling us that if we go to school in London we might meet a little girl called Bindi, with an unusual history. That immediately makes this world of magic "real!" Unusually for a children's book, the story begins by having us empathize with Jan, a sad bride and former child actress whose career was cut short by a leg injury, and who wants more than anything else to have a child. She is out in the garden weeping over her loneliness when she is startled by Tiki, a fairy who has been "earthed" (i.e., touched a human) when she couldn't follow her friend Wiljic through Jan's toes. Wiljic is mischievous and knew that Tiki was too fat to get through!Tiki is wearing jeans under her frilly fairy skirt, although it's forbidden by the fairy queen-- "we love her"-- Tiki says loudly-- and fascinated by Jan's loneliness and tears. The lovely insouciance of all of the fairies-- when we eventually meet Wiljic it's too discover he longs for savory foods like boiled egg and is sick of nectar and nasturtium-- is just one of the many details that lend reality to this story. We also know right away that there is trouble in fairyland if the queen makes her subjects so nervous.Tiki arranges for Jan to have a fairy baby (start a pregancy with a little help) and gets herself and Wiljic in trouble. Meanwhile, Bindi is a nearly perfect human child, with just a small tuft of blue hair... but the fairy queen has not forgotten the disobediance that led to her birth!This story has all the elements of classic fairy tales but is set in a recognizable modern world. Characters are drawn quickly but have enormous personality-- in the chapter where Bindi wears a wasp necklace sent by the fairy queen which influences her to misbehave, we quickly get a feeling for her school companions, too. That kind of clear, sharp writing reminds me a bit of Lewis and the Narnian chronicles.My only complaint about this book is that it isn't longer-- although it's just the length it needs to be!A must-read for anyone needing a smile and a flash of delight.

Great Book!

My fifth grade teacher read aloud to our class. It was a very fun book that she read, not boring. I listened intently every time. I am now in sixth grade, and I am using the characters for a Language Arts class. I really enjoyed this book, and even if you don't believe in fairies, I'm sure you will too!

Wonderful book

As a child, any story with the word 'fairies' in it caught my attention. My older sister first read me bits and piece of this book when I was 4 or 5, as that she was reading it for a book review. I was fascinated by the way the fairies could change their clothes, their sweet tears, and allthe other magical things about the book. When I was older, I read the book, and I fell in love with fairies all over again. This book is fantastic for anyone of any age. I still own my copy and read it from time to time, and I am now 16! I definitely recommend this book to teachers as story time reading, or as a class read for 5th or 6th graders. To me, this is just as much of a classic as Margaret Mitchell's Gone With the Wind or Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice.

From someone who read it years ago...

I first read tis book years ago- literally! I was in a school library in Australia and I picked it up, and loved it at the age of 8. I never re-read it although I thought about it a few times when I got a litle older, and I actually tried to look for the book but had forgotten the name... Now that i've re-found it, let me tell all the potential readers out there that this is one of the most imaginative childrens books out there. Even if you don't believe in fairies, the story of Jan and Charlie who want a child- a wish granted by a jeans wearing rebelious fairy- is one that will entertain and amuse even an older audience. If you're 8 or 16, it's a book that should be read by children of all ages who need the spark of magic in their lives to flare up.
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