![]() When The Fairy Rebel was published in America in 1988, PW called it a ""comfortable, old-fashioned read"" about the ""naughty but courageous"" fairy Tiki, who defies her queen to give a childless couple a baby. She hears a voice from the mountain calling her, and her quest is set in motion. by Victor Ambrus, readers meet 14-year-old Dakin, who at age 10 set herself three goals: to go to the farthest-away mountain, to see a gargoyle, and to marry a prince. ""The title tells all: slightly pompous, no slouch when it comes to vocabulary, and with a gift for dry humor, Houdini relates the story of his acquisition by a family and the trial runs and trouble spots that turn him into a great escapologist."" In The Farthest-Away Mountain, illus. by Terry Riley, ""Banks has slipped into the hide of the hamster and seems to understand these small creatures completely, creating a tantalizing journey,"" wrote PW when the book was released in the U.S. ![]() For I, Houdini: The Autobiography of a Self-Educated Hamster, illus. ![]() A trio of titles by Lynne Reid Banks, author of The Indian in the Cupboard, makes a reappearance. ![]()
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