In the final installment of Beyond the Spiderwick Chronicles , Nick and Laurie had thought they solved their giant problems when they drove all the giants into the sea. But now, the Grace kids have come back to tell them they may have more trouble coming their way!
It turns out the giants control the population of Hydra, a dragon like creature that is creating sinkholes all over Florida. But with the mermaids refusing to return the giants to the shore, the nixie's still missing and the threat of a destroyed Florida drawing closer, the kids have to take matters in their own hands.
Will Nick and Laurie be able to stop the destruction they unwittingly caused? Can a new giant hunter help save the day? Can Arthur Spiderwick's Field Guide help them out of this or are they on their own?
Find out in the final conclusion of the Spiderwick saga!
#1 New York Times bestselling author and illustrator, Tony DiTerlizzi, has been creating children’s books for twenty years. From fanciful picture books like The Broken Ornament and The Spider & The Fly (a Caldecott Honor book), to chapter books like Kenny and The Dragon and The Search for WondLa, DiTerlizzi imbues his stories with rich imagination. With Holly Black, he created the middle-grade series, The Spiderwick Chronicles, which has sold over 20 million copies, been adapted into a feature film, and translated in over thirty countries. He teamed up with Lucasfilm to retell the original Star Wars trilogy as a picture book and his collaboration with celebrated author Mo Willems created the bestseller The Story of Diva & Flea. The Norman Rockwell museum’s retrospective, “Never Abandon Imagination”, featured artwork from the beginning of DiTerlizzi’s career as a contributing artist for Dungeons & Dragons and broke attendance records. He has been featured in Time magazine, USA Today, CNN, PBS, NPR the BBC and The Today Show.
I read this last book in the series more for closure than anything else. It is good that this marks the last book in the Spiderwick series (well, technically "Beyond Spiderwick") as I think it has run out of energy.
The Wyrm King wraps up this follow up series of chapter books to the famous Spiderwick Chronicles. Beyond Spiderwick was an interesting way to extend the concept and the books were enjoyable but not in the "I can't wait until the next book comes out" way of some series.
This one continues to explore the familial relationships that result from remarriage and step-siblings. Nick and Laurie work out there relationship and bravely take on the threat of Hydra. For their intended audience (Ages 9-12) I am sure these are fun and adventurous chapter books but to me they seemed to have lost a little of the original magic.
Oh thank goodness the audioboooks were 2 hours each AND for Libby reading speed being able to up the speed. I personally didn't like this spinoff and it felt like it was unecssary and they were too quick, the character development for this short trilogy wasn't the greatest, the execution of this story felt too bland and random. To the point I was honestly bored. But for kids books they'll be enjoyable still, but I think I'd prefer the originals to this with the Grace kids and their adventures. *shrugging shoulders*
So I guess overall I had to do my EXTREMELY RARE 1 star ratings for this spinoff trilogy, and no matter how heartbreaking it is it rate a book as a 1 star, I have to go with my gut and rate them all 1 star *crying*
Finally the last book in this series! What a relief. Unfortunately I didn't enjoy this journey. Only some bits and pieces created from a fantasy world. Although, in general it wasn't interesting. Very boring and colorless. Not memorable.
kind of hate these kids after this book. I like all the faeries they try kill and be jerks to much better. They could of helped the nixie's like 3 books ago. The field guide looks more interesting than the series.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
It's fiiine. I wish we had a bit more space for the relationships between the characters, but there's like seven kids and a guy all running around and it's dire!! so we gotta get to the action.
I'll tell you this, I'm sadder to be leaving this world than my 9 (9! She had a birthday) is. I think the giants were too much for her. And I think the idea of the Hydra's may have been too much for her. She wasn't really all that interested in this one, to be honest. I don't think I was either. While I like all of the kids, I really didn't like the idea of the Wyrm King. Of all of the Fey out there and all of the creatures this book could have been about, they picked a Hydra. So. That was kind of a letdown for me, I suppose.
The story itself was still fun, and I loved the inclusion of the Grace kids. So I think that's where my stars come from. When I asked K why she's rating it three stars, she shrugged at me. I can only assume she just mostly enjoyed the story and was happy to see Jared again. She connected with him and Mallory much more than she did with Nick and Laurie.
The last book in the Spiderwick universe and the two families of faerie fighters unite forces - the Grace siblings and the Vargas kids to tackle a problem that just constantly gets further out of hand this whole book!
I have a feeling the authors don't like Florida because it gets absolutely razed in this book between giants demolishing buildings and the sinkholes everywhere. But it sure keeps things interesting for the reader (although typically shows no aftermath).
Its just such a wonderful middle grade series and this little extra trilogy was a great complement to the original series.
Overall, I really liked this book! It was a pretty decent conclusion to the series, and I thought it was perfect that the Grace siblings were there for the final defeat of the Wyrm King. This book was longer than the others, and unfortunately there were quite a few places where I felt like it dragged. But in general, it was a fun little read.
I’m really happy that I reread these books! And it was great fun getting to read the three Beyond Spiderwick books for the first time. I do think that those books are aimed at an older audience than the others because of some of the content.
I liked it. I thought it was a fitting end to Nick's story. I found myself enjoying the last three books mkre than i had the first five. I liked the characters more. I think the fifth book might be my favorite but this one is a close third. The second book in beyond the Spiderwick Chronicles being my second favorite. I think the climax needed a page or two more in what happened after Nick's plan worked instead of cutting directly to the hospital. But it was a fun read none the less.
Trop longue cette dernière trilogie. Les cinq premiers tomes se suffisent à eux-mêmes. Et je fait un blocage sur les formulations choisies par la traductrice et l'éditeur (qui n'est pas la même que dans les deux précédents tomes). Pourquoi dire "roi de dragons" ou "roi de rats" et pas "roi DES dragons" et "roi DES rats" ? Je ne comprends pas...
This is a review of the series moreso than this book.
Beyond the Spiderwick Chronicles is, at first glance, basically the kind of sequel you'd expect. It takes the themes and ideas of the first Spiderwick series and revisits them with a new cast of characters. So again, we have kids who discover the hidden magic all around them, by gaining the ability to see the fairies and other assorted magic creatures around them. And they also get involved in a big adventure, that involves having to save people from the creatures that - to everyone else - are essentially invisible.
But for the sequel series, the authors tried to mix things up a little. Family backgrounds were changed: instead of a family on the brink of divorce, we get a blended family - Nick Vargas and his new, fairy-obsessed sister who just got introduced to his life. The setting is different: the woodsy small town is replaced with the Florida beach. And, perhaps most controversially of all, the threat is replaced: sentient human-like goblins are replaced with giants and wyrms, who have the intelligence of a typical animal, but are threatening just the same.
One of the things I liked about the original Spiderwick series is the constant looming threat of the ogre Mulgareth and his army, and what they might do to the kids as they try to get their MacGuffin... er, book. All the threats they encountered were intelligent life forms - goblins that locked kids in cages and wanted to eat them, dwarves who captured the sister and put her in a sleeping spell, and the shapeshifting ogre who ultimately came after the entire family.
But in Beyond the Spiderwick Chronicles, the primary threats are animalistic. The giants just stomp around and react to specific things, unintentionally damaging the world around them, hence they must be stopped. The wyrms have their own animal-like behavior, and they cause havoc without consciously knowing what they're doing. Basically, it's like taking a story of someone who has to evade a kidnapper, and deciding to write a sequel where the person has to survive an earthquake instead. The change is almost that drastic. Human vs. magic humanoid becomes human vs. magic nature.
But most of the classic Spiderwick elements still remain. Mermaids and boggarts still exist, and are still sentient and show human-like desires and pose their own unique threats. The characters still have to use brains rather than brawn to survive, always to me the defining element of an adventure. And the mix of adventurous storytelling with fun character interaction and real-life elements continues just as before, and done just as well as in the first series.
One thing does bother me a bit, though, and that is the enlarging of the cast. In the first Spiderwick, the kids were mostly acting on their own, though with some magical help and a brief chat with two adult mentors who, for their own reasons, cannot actively help them. Here, though, the kids gain direct help from not only the main characters of the first book series, but they even get help from the girlfriend of the older brother character, bringing in another outsider, and there's another adult mentor.
It is neat to see the Grace kids from the first book interacting with the Vargas family from this one, and I also liked seeing Nick's older brother introduce his girlfriend to the fairy world and get her help. But it's just not the same as with the first book, where Simon, Jared and Mallory Grace were on their own. Here, Nick Vargas has many supports he can call on, and does. In the end, of course, it's largely Nick's quick thinking that save the day, but it just wasn't quite the same feeling as when you have a smaller cast of main characters handling their own selves against a big threat.
However, even with these changes, I still liked the new series overall. The storytelling was of the same quality as the first, the interactions between the old and new characters were interesting and fun, and the change from "intelligent" to "natural" threat was actually handled pretty well, and proved to be just as devastating - actually, much moreso - as the threat from the first book series. In all, I'd have to say that Beyond the Spiderwick Chronicles is a worthy follow-up to the original Spiderwick Chronicles, and while I'm still not a huge fan of all the changes done, I think that overall, it was handled pretty well.
Well, this is the third and final installment of this bizarre little spin-off series, and unfortunately, the best thing that can be said about the whole affair is that at least it's a quick read. As I feared, this book made the second one entirely unnecessary. I guess a series of two books seems pretty flimsy, but to stretch the "plot" out across three books makes it even more obviously weak. A good portion of the book is spent totally undoing everything that was the entire point of the second book, and the happenings of the first one are almost forgotten. This book and series is really trying to get some kind of scope and feeling of real danger across, but it just doesn't work. The writing is bland, the characters even more so, and the story is embarrassingly puerile. So many plot elements just didn't make sense. I'm kind of amazed that certain (even promising!) characters appeared for literally about 20 pages throughout the entire series, and then just left the story without any decent explanation. Nick is still unpleasant, though there are attempts at his redemption, and his transformation as a character is still abrupt and pretty unconvincing. Laurie still comes across as a weaksauce Luna Lovegood copy with a fraction of the personality or memorability. Just because someone wears odd clothes and you say she's quirky doesn't mean she is--You have to show that she is. It seemed like they really wanted to cram a lot of stuff in here, so they finally had a LOT of action, and the whole thing is hurried and spread really thin across too many characters and too many events. Really, they should have spread the events of this one across two books and skipped almost all of what happened in book 2. I also just don't think the Grace kids needed to be involved at all, except maybe as a brief cameo, a subtle wink to fans of the first series, but I guess there's not much subtlety involved in this book.
And yes, the issues of divorce and mixed family are a little more prevalent here: Indeed, the first scene lands the family of five smack-dab in the middle of a hippie psychologist's office (located in her garage--how... charming?), where we are witness to an overlong and ineffective session of family therapy. Why is it that both the core trios of kids in the Spiderwick series come from broken families? It seems kind of like easy drama and angst, automatically built in, and therefore feels kind of like lazy writing. In the end, they basically hug and decide to, y'know, try and stuff. Personal growth was hastily thrown in at the end, and didn't really convince me.
I would give this 1 1/2 stars, if half-star ratings were allowed, since it IS a little better than the second one, and it DOES have a little bit more direction, but it's still just a sort of shameless attempt at capitalizing on the young fantasy genre. I liked a very few things about this book. Their take on giants, mermaids and dragons is pretty unique, but is unfortunately used to little effect in the end. The design is still pretty cool, but the illustrations have sadly declined in quality and interest from those in the first book. The kids look different ages every time they appear, they don't dress like kids really do, and WHY do Julian and Mallory have the same haircut?
On the back cover are splashed in large, unmistakable lettering the words: "IT'S OVER!!!" Let's hope so.
Another great series ending! Blended families tend to struggle more and I appreciate that this small trilogy showed that without going overboard. This was also a spell binding, fast paced read with challenges and heroics that were crazy and fun but scary and just...crazy! I'm grateful to have been able to read this trilogy.
Well, I finished it, and I held out hope until end. I thought with the emergence of the Wyrm King this series might save itself and pull out of the nose dive. Alas, twas not the case. The series ends the way it began with a weak plot line and weaker character development. There was opportunity in the final climatic moments for it to at least provide a thrilling mental picture battle, but it falls just short. There's a half hearted attempt in the poem at the end to pull some moral message out of the story, but it really doesn't click, and the attempt there to make it a good verse evil battle is too little too late, we've seen Mulgarath, we know what evil is and neither the giants or the Wyrm King provide that kind of character. So there is no good vs. evil, there is no personal responsibility or development, there is no intense fantasy action, in short there just isn't much here, even the magical characters don't hold the same charm they did in the original five books. In fact, I really wish they didn't try and tie this on as the closing of the Spiderwick chronicles, because really the first series did everything the second didn't and it would be to its advantage to not be associated with these books at all.