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Bookweird #2

Bookweirder

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With its spirit of adventure, Bookweirder courts new readers and keeps Malcolm and Norman's devoted fans captivated.Norman Jespers-Vilnius is stuck in the sleepy British countryside with his parents and ultra-irritating sister. Things couldn't be duller — until Norman finds himself in the middle of the adventure story he discovered in the house's dusty library. Soon Norman is making strange new allies and stranger new enemies as struggles to rescue his best friend Malcolm the Prince of Stoats from another book gone wrong. Can Norman save Malcolm and steer the novel back on track? Can he hide his adventures in bookweird from his suspicious mother and the meddlesome Fuchs? Before we find out, we follow Norman on a chilling trip to 19th-century Paris, a fiery medieval adventure and, finally, a mission to discover the family secret at the heart of bookweird.

256 pages, Kindle Edition

First published September 28, 2010

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Paul Glennon

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Nikki in Niagara.
4,391 reviews174 followers
December 15, 2010
Reason for Reading: next in the series.

When I read Bookweird back in 2008, I had no idea there would be a sequel, and I'd be pretty surprised if the author was positive there would be a sequel either as the book just didn't read like part of a series. That first book made my honorable mentions list of best books read that year so when I discovered the sequel published this year I just had to read it!

It's been a year since the previous events and Norman has not gone into a book again figuring the results are much too dire for him to be messing around with. His family is spending the summer in England in his mother's family home, owned by her brother, who is away. Here Norman finds a set of his mother's childhood books about "The Intrepid Three" and starts reading one only to fall asleep and wake up in the book. Both Norman and Malcolm, the stoat king, have been lured into this book by the mysterious librarian who is playing the part of Mr. Todd, the lawyer this time. But just what is going on? Malcolm needs a map that his father gave Norman as a gift last time, things are not going right in this book for the Intrepid Three as they are being harassed by a "poacher" who just happens to be the killer Norman set loose from his mother's mystery book last time. As Malcolm and Norman try to put this book back on track Norman needs to go into other books to put the pieces together of a family secret as Norman suspects his mother might actually know about the bookweird. This time he visits 19th century Paris in a Poe short story, then a medieval adventure story as well as the WWI era Intrepid Three.

A splendid book. The events from book one, Bookweird, are quite pertinent to the story so do read that first to appreciate this book at its fullest. Though it's been two years since I read Bookweird, the events came back to me very quickly as they were briefly referred to here and I was deep inside Bookweirder right away. This is a brilliant world Glennon has created and one that any bibliophile is going to love immersing themselves into. Wouldn't it be wonderful to hop into the books you were reading and have a quick conversation with your favourite character? But unfortunately, going into a book starts to change the story as soon as you arrive so you have to be careful! The book is deceptive with its 246 page count, since it is a trade paperback and the type is unusually small. So don't count on it being such a quick read as it looks before you open it up. However, it's an engaging story, which this time has definitely been written as the precursor to another book. There are plenty of mysteries still unsolved, threads hanging, and in fact the book ends with one problem all wrapped up and Malcolm and Norman setting out to fix the next. Any guesses on the next book's title? Bookweirdest? Bookweirderer? I'll be looking forward to it!

PS - Just found out this is being called a trilogy. So one more book, but no details can be found yet.
275 reviews16 followers
August 20, 2011
Read as consideration for a literary award, so not able to rate at the present time.

Judging done, and results in the bag, though still secret for a while. So I feel I can put my rating on this. Superbly done. Nice gentle prose style and thoroughly original. A splendid YA read, and a recommended read for anyone who loves books.
Profile Image for Liz.
209 reviews11 followers
May 6, 2011
This book is shades of Inkheart to the point where a kid who loved the Inkheart books would feel in very familiar territory with Paul Glennon's "Bookweirder". Book two of a trilogy, this book stands fairly well alone from the first book ("Bookweird"). It follows the adventures of Norman who is a voracious reader who can literally fall into stories, often with disasterous effects.
Profile Image for Debbie.
17 reviews14 followers
December 26, 2012
This series is a lot of fun. It's Never Ending Story meets Redwall meets Hardy Boys. I enjoy the characters, especially the family. The books are well written and go places I didn't anticipate.
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

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