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The Music Fairies #6

Victoria the Violin Fairy

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The Music Fairies desperately need Rachel's and Kirsty's help! Jack Frost and his naughty goblins have stolen the fairies' Magical Musical Instruments, which means that music is being ruined for everyone! Jack Frost plans to use the instruments to help him win a national talent competition in the human world, and with the help of the enchanted instruments, he's bound to win. If this happens, humans will find out about Fairyland and then all the fairies will be in danger! Victoria must find her violin - how can Rachel and Kirsty help her?

80 pages, Paperback

Published January 1, 2008

23 people are currently reading
622 people want to read

About the author

Daisy Meadows

1,115 books730 followers
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.

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5 stars
234 (45%)
4 stars
93 (18%)
3 stars
128 (25%)
2 stars
34 (6%)
1 star
20 (3%)
Displaying 1 - 18 of 18 reviews
Profile Image for The Dragon Den Book Blog.
2,972 reviews66 followers
November 14, 2022
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!
61 reviews
September 24, 2017
Running a little bit out of steam in reading these to my children at night. They are becoming painfully repetitive. I may have to hide the saxophone fairy book as I am not sure I could stand the excitement of encountering the outcome of the great talent show that is being hijacked by Jack Frost and his goblins...
Profile Image for ashton.
50 reviews
October 2, 2025
Out of the Musical Instruments series, I was definitely the most hyped for this one, and I loved it. The way they switched the magic violin for a normal one in a few seconds during a blackout? Go girls! Victoria's design? I'm sold.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Kylie Abecca.
Author 9 books42 followers
July 8, 2020
These books do get repetitive when read all in one hit, but still a great series for younger readers.
Profile Image for Katy Lovejoy.
10.7k reviews9 followers
December 10, 2025
I used to want to be a fairy. still do because their worries and stresses are solved with magic
Profile Image for Diya.
256 reviews2 followers
November 7, 2023
This book was such a relief after that awful BSC book I read. It was fun and cute but not as memorable as other Rainbow Magic books for me personally.

Not totally pros, more just things I liked:
-The fact that this book came out in 2013 and still had the girls use one of those older chunky computers from 2006 is so funny to me.
-I think that the idea of Jack Frost having his goblins try to blend in with humans using a spell is something this series has never done, which is commendable because this is like the70th book or something, so the fact that they can still provide a fresh plot points is fantastic.
-I LOVE Victoria’s design, it’s very much so reminiscent of that Disney era where layers and patterned jeans and tall boots were the go-to for styling. This is something I would’ve wanted to wear as a kid, like, if this book had come out when I was in elementary school, I would’ve dressed up as Victoria.
-I also think Victoria was a fun character, like, her being all huffy over the goblin trying to claim her violin was very cute.
-“The violin had to be very magical. How else could the lumpy-fingered goblin produce such incredible music?” - LOL, the girls are vicious.
Profile Image for Cecelia.
164 reviews6 followers
October 14, 2015
Rachel and Kristy go to listen to the high school band but the musicians are goblins. One of them has Victoria the Violin Fairy's magical violin. When the conductor who is also watching the band leaves the room, Rachel and Kristy find Victoria the Violin Fairy. Then Rachel says that maybe if they get the goblin with the violin to play a solo, with the spotlight on him, they could drop the scenery before the other goblins could get on the stage. Then it would be easier to get the violin back, with only one goblin. When the goblin notices that the other goblins are still over on the other side, Rachel pretends to struggle with pulling the scenery back up. She says it wasn't working and he would have to crawl under it. He had to put the violin down to crawl under it. So Victoria turns the light off when they lift the scenery up less than halfway. Then Rachel switches the violin for a not magical one.
Profile Image for Dolly.
Author 1 book670 followers
January 15, 2011
This is the sixth book of seven in the "Music Fairies" series by the group of authors who go by the name Daisy Meadows. It's a fun series, especially for young girls who are starting to read chapter books. Our oldest is addicted and I am encouraging it since I am confident that these books will help her develop a love for reading! She reads them on her own and will sometimes read aloud to me. I have been reading them along with her (at first I was irritated by them, but now they amuse me and they only take about 5 minutes to read). We will discuss the plots, her favorite parts and what we think will happen later in the series. We've read through several of these series of books and our oldest is determined to read them all. I love it!
Displaying 1 - 18 of 18 reviews

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