The Nixie's Song
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- $8.99
Publisher Description
The Spiderwick Chronicles leave the old-fashioned charm of New England far behind and head south for some fiendish faerie fun in the hot Florida sun. Eleven-year-old Nicholas Vargas only thinks his life has been turned upside down after his developer father remarries and moves his new wife and daughter into the soon-to-be completed Mangrove Hollow.
But an "expedition" to a nearby lake turns up a little nixie with a giant problem - the huge, lumbering, fire-breathing variety - and it's up to Nick; his stepsister, Laurie; and his big brother, Julian (plus a familiar face from the original Spiderwick Chronicles) to figure out the best way to stop a host of rampaging giants before all of Florida goes up in smoke.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Spiderwick creators Black and DiTerlizzi reopen the book on their popular faerie setting with this slim but entertaining meta-story, kicking off the spin-off series, Beyond the Spiderwick Chronicles. Nick Vargas is in a serious funk after the death of his mother, and it's only made worse when his father remarries and he ends up with a new sister, Laurie (who "seemed to be proud to be the lamest person alive"). Laurie is obsessed with faeries, thanks to her well-worn copy of Black and DiTerlizzi's Arthur Spiderwick's Field Guide to the Fantastical World Around You. Nick doesn't believe they are real, of course, until he picks up a four-leaf clover and spies a wounded nixie in his yard. The new siblings help the nixie, Taloa, back to the water, and promise to help her find her missing sisters. In their search they find the bodies of three nixies and a fire-breathing dirt giant that appears to be responsible both for the nixies' deaths and the destruction of a large section of the woods. Stumped about how to defeat the giant, they head to a book signing where they meet Black and DiTerlizzi (who turn out to be utterly unhelpful). In a fortunate twist, however, they meet Jared and Simon, the original series' protagonists, who prove more than willing to help. The illustrations are as charming as always, and the text zips along; Black manages to carefully balance the terror of having a dirt giant threaten your house and the equally horrible prospect of having to share a bedroom with a girl. Ages 7-up.
Customer Reviews
Pretty good
I thought it was a totally awesome book.
best book ever
great books love this one so funny but you never want to put the book down