This book is one of my favorite books that I have ever read.
It is about a boy named Harrison who is grieving for his mother who died a year before in a car crash. His father becomes more distant and eventually sells their house so he can leave for a touring job. He leaves Harrison in the small Utah desert town of Muse. Muse has an annual art contest, and a mysterious entity called a muse would pick one or more people to be granted a wish. However, the muse has not been seen in many years after the people of Muse started to make the art contest more about money and less about art. Harrison makes two friends: Chloe and Marco. Chloe is not really a special character in any way, but she is still a very real, fresh, and complex character that I could see as someone in real life. Marco is a boy who stutters, which is the coolest thing that I have ever seen in a book. I have a stutter, and for Rimington to include this in the book is amazing. I gasped aloud when Marco was introduced.
IF YOU HAVE NOT READ THIS BOOK, DO NOT READ ANY FURTHER BECAUSE THIS PART CONTAINS MAJOR SPOILERS!
As the book progresses, he becomes more at home in Muse, but still wishes that his father was with him. Finally, at the very end of the book, Harrison and his friends meet the muse and then host a tribute concert for his mom. After the concert, he feels sad because his dad is not there, but then he notices him, and they have a hug that "has enough love for three people."
In the end, his dad moves to Muse and they live happily ever after. This is the part I don't like as much. The ending seems fake, and it just wasn't satisfying. It felt like the author was trying too hard to make the ending work out happily, but I think that it gave the message that everything was awesome again, but in the world we live in, that's not the case.
So in conclusion, this was an incredible book but the ending just wasn't satisfying. I would recommend this to everyone one hundred times over, and as a budding author myself hoping to get published someday, I'm going to give the experience that Rimington gave me with Marco to somebody else, and then I can say that Tips for Magicians did that for me.