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359 pages, Hardcover
First published June 12, 2018
STOP! Before you start reading this book, what day is it? If it’s a Thursday, close this book immediately and start it tomorrow instead.
It made me laugh out loud. It was, as it happens, a Thursday I checked this out from the library…I put the book down and picked it up again on Friday.
Greg is a misfit scholarship kid at Isaacson Prepatory Empowerment Establishment (IPEE; that made me giggle as well) where his only friend is the rich, popular Edwin Aldaron. When Greg’s father is kidnapped, Greg learns that he is actually a Dwarf, and is thrown into a magical world he’s never known, but needs to learn if he wants to rescue his father.
The friendship between Greg and Edwin is wonderful and reminds me of the earliest seasons of Smallville—the amazing friendship that developed between Clark Kent and Lex Luthor. Greg is a down-to-earth, normal boy and his best friend Edwin is rich, good-looking, and his parents are extremely influential; they shouldn’t be best friends, but they are, and they go to bat for each other even though the friendship experiences tension when Greg learns the truth about himself and the magical Separate Earth.
“Greg,” Edwin said calmly…
“Why didn’t you tell me?” I asked angrily.
…“I didn’t think it was my place…I thought I’d respect your father’s wishes.”
This book deals with themes of racism and sexism extremely well for a younger audience. It’s mostly subtle, but the author is also not afraid to slap you in the face with it once in a while.
“Changing your name upon finding a life partner is such a vulgar, unsophisticated tradition. Dwarven women actually have honor and self-respect in who they are.”
The magic system for Dwarves is simple, fun, and interesting. It reminds me of Poison Ivy from the Batman series.
Water began pouring out of the walkie-talkie’s seams…a dozen thick green vines came slithering out of my open locker and wrapped themselves around Mr. Phiro’s legs.
The story is fast paced with short, digestible chapters perfect for its middle-grade audience, but I thoroughly enjoyed this read as well. If you like the magical school friends of Harry Potter or the crazed supervillains of the Batman franchise, you’ll love this funny, heartwarming story.
I give The Legend of Greg: an epic series of failures
5 stars