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Recent Posts

  • Book Review: “All the Hidden Monsters” by Amie Jordan May 9, 2025
  • Book Review: “The Last One” by Rachel Howzell Hall December 5, 2024
  • Author Interview: Randy Ribay, Author of “The Reckoning of Roku” July 23, 2024
  • Book Review: “The Reckoning of Roku” (“Chronicles of the Avatar” #5) by Randy Ribay July 23, 2024
  • Book Review: “We Shall Be Monsters” by Tara Sim June 29, 2024
  • Book Review: “The Cursed Rose” (“The Bone Spindle” #3) by Leslie Vedder February 6, 2024
  • Book Review: “Divine Might: Goddesses in Greek Myth” by Natalie Haynes January 8, 2024
  • Book Review: “The Blood Years” by Elana K. Arnold November 17, 2023
  • Book Review: “Check & Mate” by Ali Hazelwood November 7, 2023
  • Series Review: “Catwings” by Ursula K. Le Guin, Illustrated by S.D. Schindler October 24, 2023
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Book Review: The Snow Spider by Jenny Nimmo

[button color=”black” size=”big” link=”http://affiliates.abebooks.com/c/99844/77798/2029?u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.abebooks.com%2Fservlet%2FSearchResults%3Fisbn%3D9780439846752″ target=”blank” ]Purchase here[/button]

This first book in The Magician Trilogy introduces Gwyn Griffiths, an ordinary Welsh farm-boy who is about to begin an extraordinary adventure. On his ninth birthday his grandmother, Nain, gives him five strange gifts which, she claims, have been handed down through generations of her family, going back to the legendary Welsh magician Gwydion. Nain hopes that her own Gwydion Gwyn will turn out to be a magician too. She is not disappointed.

Gwyn’s five gifts include a stick of seaweed, a silver locket, a wooden flute, a badly damaged toy horse, and a yellow scarf. Gwyn is most surprised by the scarf, which was last seen around the neck of his sister Bethan, who walked out into a rainy night four years before and was never seen again. But it is the horse he really needs to look out for, because in it is trapped an evil spirit that must never be set free.

Gwyn gives the other four gifts to the wind, as Nain tells him to do. What he gets in return are a silver spider that shows him scenes from another world in her mirror like web; a silver flute that enables him to hear sounds from that world as well; an encounter with an icy-cold spaceship; and a visit with a girl who is remarkably like his missing sister, only paler, colder, and not a day older than Bethan was when she disappeared.

Much of this book is the moving story about how this unearthly girl’s visit heals a deep wound in Gwyn’s family. But another major part is about the toll magic takes on Gwyn’s social life, and the danger that results when he makes his first, inevitable, magical mistakes.

All by itself this is a very fine story, though it imbibes enough of the traditional lore of Welsh magic to merit a mild “occult content” warning. But just you wait: the trilogy gets better and better!

  • Post date
    January 1, 2013
  • Posted by
    Robbie
  • Posted in Book Reviews
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