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    Horten's Miraculous Mechanisms: Magic, Mystery, and a Very Strange Adventure

    Horten's Miraculous Mechanisms: Magic, Mystery, and a Very Strange Adventure

    4.5 23

    by Lissa Evans


    eBook

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    $6.99
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      ISBN-13: 9781402798450
    • Publisher: Sterling Children's Books
    • Publication date: 04/03/2012
    • Sold by: Barnes & Noble
    • Format: eBook
    • Pages: 272
    • Sales rank: 389,007
    • File size: 2 MB
    • Age Range: 8 - 12 Years

    Lissa Evans's route to children's fiction author is perhaps as roundabout as Stuart's adventures in Beeton. After a brief career as a doctor of medicine and then in stand-up comedy, Lissa became a comedy producer, first in radio and then in television, before turning to writing. She has penned books for adults as well as picture books for children. This is her first middle-grade novel. Lissa lives with her family in North London.

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    Enter a wonderful world filled with real magic, mystery … and danger.
    As if being small for his age and also having S. Horten as his name isn't bad enough, now 10-year-old Stuart is forced to move far away from all his friends.But on his very first day in his new home, Stuart's swept up in an extraordinary adventure: the quest to find his great-uncle Tony--a famous magician who literally disappeared off the face of the earth--and Tony's marvelous, long-lost workshop. Along the way, Stuart reluctantly accepts help from the annoying triplets next door… and encounters trouble from another magician who's also desperate to get hold of Tony's treasures.
    A quirky, smart, charming page-turner, Horten's Miraculous Mechanisms will enchant young readers--as well as teachers, librarians, and parents.  Long-listed for the Carnegie Medal (2012) and the Guardian Children's Fiction Prize (2011)

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    School Library Journal
    Gr 4–6—Ten-year-old Stuart is unhappy about moving to a new town with his academic parents, especially the small British town of Beeton where his father grew up. But when he discovers a challenge in a note from the legendary Tony Horten, his magician great-uncle who disappeared years earlier, to find his hidden workshop of "miraculous mechanisms," the summer becomes an adventure. By finding Tony's hidden clues and following them on a sort of scavenger hunt to the past, Stuart dodges the nosy triplets next door, makes a friend, helps two sisters reunite, outwits a greedy villain, gets out of some dangerous scrapes, and inherits a magical legacy. Fans of mysteries, puzzles, and Trenton Lee Stewart's The Mysterious Benedict Society (Little, Brown, 2007) will be happy to make Stuart's acquaintance, and they will look forward to the promised sequel.—Laurie Slagenwhite Walters, Peachtree Montessori International, Ann Arbor, MI
    Publishers Weekly
    Evans borrows several classic tropes and themes—magic, riddles, a quest, and even a night at a museum—for the entertaining story of 10-year-old Stuart Horten (often nicknamed “Shorten” for his small stature) who stumbles into a family mystery when he and his parents move to the small British town of Beeton. There, ­Stuart discovers that his Great-Uncle Tony Horten, who disappeared years ago without a trace, was both an inventor of mechanical devices and a magician. A chance phone call in a broken phone booth is the first step in a journey that leads Stuart around town, as he unearths his great-uncle’s legacy and secrets. Stuart also draws the attention of April, May, and June (the journalistically inclined triplets next door), as well as Beeton residents with more sinister intentions. Evans has crafted an old-fashioned mystery of the kids-besting-clueless-adults variety. Stuart’s dweeby parents are particularly hapless (his father, a crossword puzzle creator, regularly drops lines like “Behold, I bring hydration for your powwow”). First published in the U.K., Evans’s story leaves the door open for the sequel due in September. Ages 8–12. (Apr.)
    The Guardian
    Small Stuart embarks on an awfully big adventure in this quirky puzzle-solving novel....Each more curious than the one before, the far-fetched solutions they require bring the book to a hugely satisfying conclusion.
    The Independent
    An adventure that will enthrall smaller people and the adults reading to them in equal measure.
    The Bookbag
    The action cracks along at a good pace and is a brilliant pre-teen magical mystery story.
    Fun Kids
    This story has time travel, dastardly villains, lots of machinery and some seriously good adventures!
    From the Publisher
    "Wacky, funny and ever so mysterious, this clever tale hits the ground running and never lets up. Very short 10-year-old Stuart Horten—S. Horten, get it?—thinks he’s facing a long, boring summer when his parents pack the three of them up and move to his father’s hometown as school lets out. His parents are a pleasantly oblivious pair: His mom is an unimaginative doctor, and his father designs crosswords for a living. (He joyfully tosses around hundred-dollar words like 'prestidigitator' and 'perambulation.') Stuart quickly discovers the long-abandoned home of his great uncle Teeny-Tiny Tony Horton, a famous magician who disappeared 50 years before, and the puzzle box left to his incurious father. Resourceful Stuart wants to learn more, but he’s plagued by the girl next door, who’s intently following him everywhere. Just as a fabulous clue appears in a vandalized phone booth, the prying girl, April, shows up, and it turns out she’s identical twins—oh, no! triplets—April, May and June. And they’re shortly followed by the villainous, entrepreneurial Jeannie, hot on Stuart’s heels. The pace is rapid, the clues to Tony’s disappearance are intriguing and the characters are vividly—often hilariously—drawn. Irony runs hand in hand with just enough believable danger to create palpable tension.
    A vastly engaging, must-read mystery infused with the perfect touch of captivating conjuration—er, magic." --Kirkus Reviews (Starred Review) 
     
    “Evans borrows several classic tropes and themes-magic, riddles, a quest, and even a night at a museum-for the entertaining story of 10-year-old Stuart Horten (often nicknamed “Shorten” for his small stature) who stumbles into a family mystery when he and his parents move to the small British town of Beeton. There, Stuart discovers that his Great-Uncle Tony Horten, who disappeared years ago without a trace, was both an inventor of mechanical devices and a magician. A chance phone call in a broken phone booth is the first step in a journey that leads Stuart around town, as he unearths his great-uncle's legacy and secrets. Stuart also draws the attention of April, May, and June (the journalistically inclined triplets next door), as well as Beeton residents with more sinister intentions. Evans has crafted an old-fashioned mystery of the kids-besting-clueless-adults variety. Stuart's dweeby parents are particularly hapless (his father, a crossword puzzle creator, regularly drops lines like “Behold, I bring hydration for your powwow”). First published in the U.K., Evans's story leaves the door open for the sequel due in September.” --Publishers Weekly

    “Stuart is a likable, plucky little guy, the Charlie Bucket to great-uncle Tony's Willy Wonka…The elements of magical realism that waft through the narrative keep things humming along nicely. This British import, long listed for the Guardian Children's Fiction Prize, leaves the door ajar for more adventures.” --Booklist
     

    “Small Stuart embarks on an awfully big adventure in this quirky puzzle-solving novel….Each more curious than the one before, the far-fetched solutions they require bring the book to a hugely satisfying conclusion.” --The Guardian

     “An adventure that will enthrall smaller people and the adults reading to them in equal measure.” --The Independent

    “The action cracks along at a good pace and is a brilliant pre-teen magical mystery story.” --The Bookbag

    “This story has time travel, dastardly villains, lots of machinery and some seriously good adventures!” --Fun Kids
     

    Children's Literature - Mary Quattlebaum
    Anyone up for a surreal adventure? Magical illusions, a long-lost great-uncle and irksome identical triplets combine to create a memorable experience for 10-year-old Stuart Horton. In this fast-paced novel, full of unexpected twists, turns and journeys to the past, young Stuart seeks his uncle's strange workshop, which may hold the secret to his own destiny. Fans of the Mysterious Benedict Society by Trenton Lee Stewart and Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events will eagerly follow the clues and figure out the puzzles along with Stuart—and breathe a sigh of relief at the satisfying ending. Look for the sequel, Horten's Incredible Illusions, this fall. Reviewer: Mary Quattlebaum
    Kirkus Reviews
    Wacky, funny and ever so mysterious, this clever tale hits the ground running and never lets up. Very short 10-year-old Stuart Horten--S. Horten, get it?--thinks he's facing a long, boring summer when his parents pack the three of them up and move to his father's hometown as school lets out. His parents are a pleasantly oblivious pair: His mom is an unimaginative doctor, and his father designs crosswords for a living. (He joyfully tosses around hundred-dollar words like "prestidigitator" and "perambulation.") Stuart quickly discovers the long-abandoned home of his great uncle Teeny-Tiny Tony Horton, a famous magician who disappeared 50 years before, and the puzzle box left to his incurious father. Resourceful Stuart wants to learn more, but he's plagued by the girl next door, who's intently following him everywhere. Just as a fabulous clue appears in a vandalized phone booth, the prying girl, April, shows up, and it turns out she's identical twins--oh, no! triplets--April, May and June. And they're shortly followed by the villainous, entrepreneurial Jeannie, hot on Stuart's heels. The pace is rapid, the clues to Tony's disappearance are intriguing and the characters are vividly--often hilariously--drawn. Irony runs hand in hand with just enough believable danger to create palpable tension. A vastly engaging, must-read mystery infused with the perfect touch of captivating conjuration--er, magic. (Mystery. 9-14)

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