Jack Frost has stolen the Pet Fairies' magical pets! Can Rachel and Kirsty help find them? Or will the pets be lost forever?
The Pet Fairies have one of the most important jobs in Fairyland! They work with their special pets to make sure that all animals find safe homes. But now Jack Frost has stolen the magical pets! Could they be lost forever?
At an Easter egg hunt, Rachel and Kirsty spot a color-changing rabbit! Could it be the Easter Bunny, or is it Bella the Bunny Fairy's missing rabbit, Misty?
Find the magical pet in each book and help keep all the animals safe!
Daisy Meadows is the pseudonym used for the four writers of the Rainbow Magic children's series: Narinder Dhami, Sue Bentley, Linda Chapman, and Sue Mongredien. Rainbow Magic features differing groups of fairies as main characters, including the Jewel fairies, Weather fairies, Pet fairies, Petal fairies, and Sporty fairies.
Narinder Dhami was born in Wolverhampton, England on November 15, 1958. She received a degree in English from Birmingham University in 1980. After having taught in primary and secondary schools for several years she began to write full-time. Dhami has published many retellings of popular Disney stories and wrote the Animal Stars and Babes series, the latter about young British girls of Asian origin. She lives in Cambridge, England with her husband and cats.
Sue Bentley was born in Northampton, England. She worked in a library after completing her education and began writing for children once her own began school. Bentley is the author of the Magic Kitten, Magic Puppy, and S Club series and lives in Northamptonshire.
Linda Chapman has written over 50 children's fiction books, including the following series: My Secret Unicorn, Stardust, Not Quite a Mermaid, and Unicorn School. She lives in Leicestershire with her husband and daughters.
Sue Mongredien was born in 1970 and grew up in Nottingham, England. She has published over 100 children's books, including the following series: The Adventures of Captain Pugwash, The Magic Key, Frightful Families, and Oliver Moon. She has also contributed many titles to the Sleepover Club series and written picture books. Mongredien created the Royal Ballet School Diaries under the pen name Alexandra Moss. She lives with her family in Bath, England.
This is the first chapter book I ever read. It’s safe to say nostalgia heavily clouds my view of the book. This entire series got me into reading and it’s so easy to read over and over again.
100000000/5 nostalgia stars, but 4/5 overall stars
Okay, this should be Gabriella's review, not mine. But for any of you in search of books to read to a 5-year old girl who can't get enough of fairies, check out this series. There are tons of these books (the Rainbow Fairy books). They are chapter books with enough pages to make them feel like "big kid books", but there is a picture ON EVERY PAGE. This is a surprisingly hard-to-find combination, and it works for us (although I admit I'm a bit relieved that she has finally stopped demanding these stories every single night).
I had absolutely no choice but to dnf this book because I can't find an ebook version and google books is being stupid so yea...The first time I read this, I loved it! I thought it was really cute! I LOVE THE ILLUSTRATIONS! AND I LOVE BUNNIESSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS<3 :D
It is Easter and Kristy and Rachel are hiding eggs for a 5 year old girl named Jane and all her friends. While the kids are looking for the eggs, a girl thinks she sees the Easter Bunny in a hole. Rachel asks how she knew it was the Easter Bunny and she said it was because it was bright pink. Then a boy sees the same thing except it's lavender. Then Jane sees still the same thing except it's bright yellow. Rachel and Kristy think it's Bella's missing bunny. Rachel and Kristy ask Mrs. Dillon (Jane's mother) if they could borrow a blue toy bunny that was in the Easter basket full of chocolate eggs and they use the bunny to trick the goblins. They tie it to a long string and take the real bunny and tell it to turn blue and it did, then Bella used her magic fairy dust to turn the girls into fairies so they could fly along with the string right into a trap that they made. So the goblins were trapped trying to get the bunny thinking it was Bella's bunny. Bella's bunny's name was Misty.
Per my First Grade Book Club: It was funny because the goblins fell in the hole. It was fun because Bella found the bunny and took it home. I think it was awesome because it had a lot of funny things. It was good because it had some good pictures. I liked it because it had fairies and pets and especially different colored bunnies.
Thanks to the recommendation of Janette Rallison, my 9 year old and I are currently reading this together. Carly didn't want to read these books at first "because they were about fairies", but she is delighted by this book, and we are having fun reading it together.
It was a cute book. I liked how the cute fairy, Bella, could make the human girls down to fairy size, and then back. The goblins were pretty silly, and my daughter had fun trying to guess what the goblins were going to do next.
This was a good second book for the series. I didn't think the first book was the strongest start, but it picked up well here. It's short but fun. The goblins get a chance to shine, the quest is interesting, and the solution is satisfying. I feel like the books are a bit short after reading some other Rainbow Fairies books that involve three-part quests, so a single problem to solve leaves me wanting more (although I might not be the target demographic). I enjoyed the book, and I'm feeling more encouraged about the series.
Jack Frost wants a pet but in Fairyland the pets are all sentient and choose their owners themselves. Jack Frost steals all the pets from the Pet Fairies; not only are the fairies sad but they cant do their job protecting lost and homeless pets on Earth. Fortunately, the pets escape to the village of Wetherbury where Kirsty lives and Rachel is staying for one week of holiday. The series ventures to some local areas (like the park and neighbours) and also to Strawberry Farm, the stables, the Spring Show etc.
There are seven Pet Keeper fairies and they are: Katie the Kitten Fairy, Bella the Bunny Fairy, Georgia the Guinea Pig Fairy, Lauren the Puppy Fairy, Harriet the Hamster Fairy, Molly the Goldfish Fairy and Penny the Pony Fairy.
Daisy Meadows and her fairies are my childhood. I collected so many in my youth, knowing all the fairies and their importance, and sticking with the two special girls who go to be a part of the magic. Years ago I had to give my beautiful collection away, now still part of my childhood school where little girls are picking their favourite fairies and playing pretend. It's fun to hear stories from my old teachers telling me how over the years so many students have grabbed these books and fallen in love with the tales of two girls, Jack Frost and the fabulous glittering magic that is the fairies. On Christmas last year, my sister surprised me with a boxset of these books, but cause you cannot collect these darlings as easily anymore. I was over the moon! If anyone has a little one who needs a little magic in their life, wants to read and needs a big creation to be hooked on...it is Daisy Meadows!
It’s a good book, Sorry for SPOILERS but basically it’s where these two girls called Rachel and Kirsty help these fairies. There is lots of different types of fairies and basically the girls help them find a missing object ( pet hat etc) Most of the books are all the same because there all to do with mostly the same characters and they do the same things every time find an abject oh that fairy is fine now. Jack Frost and the goblins want everything so it causes trouble for the fairies
Good book if you like that stuff but not my cup of tea
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Second book from Rainbow Magic The Pet Fairies series. I disliked this book because it had no real structure. I found it to be quite a boring read, and I was mostly skimming through it. This is the second to last book I read from a ReadByZoe 24 hour readathon. Little kids books like these probably don't count; but I'm counting little kids books.
Copyright date: 2014 Star rating: 4 Award: N/A Genre: beginning chapter book Summary w/ themes: this book is about two girls who help a fairy find her lost rabbit. it has a theme of friendship. Use for future classroom: This would be a good book to keep in my library Thoughts of book: I thought this was a cute book and I enjoyed the illustrations.
This is the first chapter book the 8 year old read to herself without having it read to her first. The story is fairly simplistic and didn't hold my attention much, but she loved it and we will be looking for the next book soon.
I really like when the kids find the rabbit and they think it’s the Easter bunny and I like when the bunny disappeared and it had fairy dust around it, and rabbits are cute and Bella is really beautiful. Evelyn age 8.
I bought a stack of the rainbow magic books on a whim as I used to read them a little when I was very little, they helped me get into reading so this was very nostalgic for me