REVIEW: Bethany the Ballet Fairy (Rainbow Magic: Dance Fairies, #1), Daisy Meadows
RATING: 3/5 stars
The Stow library summer reading program measures your progress by number of books instead of by minutes, so you know what that means: it's time for children's books again so I can fulfill my completionist dreams!
I am slightly ashamed but mostly impressed that this is also my 50th book of the year, which means that I successfully completed my reading challenge. Hooray.
Anyway, this might be a juvenile text of less than 100 pages that I just picked because it was short and on my bookshelf. But because this is such a momentous occasion, it gets its own review.
The first interesting thing to note about Rainbow Magic in general is that it was written by four people. This automatically brings into question issues of continuity in both plot and writing style, but since I am reviewing an isolated book, it is difficult to take the matter deeply into account. I would say for children's literature in general that it matters less if multiple authors are involved. That being said, the pseudonym Daisy Meadows was so painfully obvious even to myself as a child that I was able to discern the false nature by the age of approximately seven. That has nothing to do with the quality of this book, but I do think it would have been more worthwhile to have one author do all the books and just work to promote quality. The fact that there are over 200 books in this series simply marks it as a cash grab, in my opinion.
As far as the actual text, I thought that the overuse of "said" alternatives and adverbs was irritating. Children are able to discern more from texts than you realize, especially with featured illustrations. The magic system also makes no sense, especially with the spell wearing off but other people seemingly not being effected. However, the fact that the king and queen were actually Titania and Oberon had me keeled over as an adult. Watching the goblin dance onstage in a tutu was also incredibly amusing beyond what I would anticipate. I've read adult books less funny than that one scene alone.
This book speaks to the pressures of exploitation, wherein the ribbons would not have been stolen if the goblins were able to adequately display dancing capabilities for Jack Frost. I'm tempted to find the rest of the dance fairy books just to see what happens to the Ice GoblinsTM. Also, I might need to steal ice goblins for D&D.