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Barbara Laban

Auteur de Moon Princess

9 oeuvres 145 utilisateurs 2 critiques

Œuvres de Barbara Laban

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Es handelt sich um Band 3 der Mitternachtskatzen-Reihe. Doch kurze Rückblenden und Einschübe dienen dem Verständnis der bisherigen Ereignisse sowie der Erinnerung für diejenigen, bei denen die Lektüre schon länger zurück liegt. Unterstützend findet sich am Buchende eine Übersicht der vierbeinigen Protagonisten.
Inhaltlich dreht sich dieses Buch um die Frage, wie der böse König Fergus Finnigan von Schottland besiegt und die schottischen Katzen von seiner Schreckensherrschaft befreit werden können. Dazu wird ein geheimnisvolles magisches Halsband benötigt, doch das ist gar nicht so einfach zu beschaffen. Und der gemeine Katzenkönig hat noch diverse Trümpfe in der Hinterpfote.
Natürlich gibt es ein Wiedersehen mit alten Bekannten. Nova und Henry finden neue Freunde, aber auch Gegner. Ich erfahre weitere Hintergrundgeschichten über die Vergangenheit der Protagonisten und es ist wieder sehr spannend.
Der gewohnt flüssige Schreibstil der Autorin lässt mich beim Lesen durch die Seiten fliegen, so dass ich das Buch kaum aus der Hand legen möchte.
Wie schon Band 1 und 2 ist auch dieses Buch vom Cover über die farbigen Bilder im Einband bis zu den schwarz-weißen Illustrationen in einigen Kapiteln von Jérôme Pélissier optisch wunderschön gestaltet.
Für Fans der Reihe lohnt sich sogar der Blick auf die Werbung im Anhang, die für alle Mitternachtskatzenfans neues Merchandise enthält.
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Signalé
Wolfbib | Mar 21, 2023 |
Full confession: I did not read all the book selections for my October Book Explosion meeting, genre fantasy. The kids (5th+) kindly informed me that I should start reading right away for the adventure genre the next month because I could explain better about the books when I'd read them. But I still have to make choices next year, so I'm trying to do both. It's, um, not working out amazingly well, probably because I'm also tackling books for several different Cybils categories as well as other projects. Oh well. I have gotten through a few!

There was only one copy in the consortium of Moon Princess, and nobody was interested in taking it. I collected it to read over lunch and I have to say - I'm glad none of the kids took it and I won't be using it as a book club choice again.

Shy Sienna has no friends but her magical companion, a sarcastic (and invisible) dog named Rufus. Her archaeologist mother disappeared in China and her dad doesn't want to talk about it. Then he comes home with news - they're moving to China. Before Sienna has time to process what's happening, she's installed in an apartment in Shanghai with a villainous Chinese housekeeper named Ling and the possibility of a mysterious friend, a boy named Feng. When she encounters her mother's lost invisible friend, a cat named Ming, the invisible friends, Sienna, and Feng set out to find Sienna's mother and her driver and assistant, Feng's older brother. Eventually they uncover a fraud in the temple and their missing family members, and the nasty Ling and corrupt monks get their comeuppance, as does Ling's dangerous crocodilian invisible friend.

The book is surprisingly stereotyped and racist, considering the author has lived in Taipei and studied the area. There is also a certain clunky turn of phrase that can be attributed to a less-than-stellar translation. However, it's glaringly obvious that of the actual Chinese protagonists one is a stereotyped villain, one is a helpless child who needs (white) Sienna to save him, and the others are clueless or corrupt monks. The mysterious doctor who helps them is another stereotype, that of a "wise elder" with little to no personality beyond his brief appearance.

The story dashes to a quick conclusion with no explanation of the origin of the invisible animals, why Sienna's father's job takes him to China (to the exact place her mother disappeared) or even a possible mention of the perhaps legitimate complaint that some of the local inhabitants resented her mother for apparently waltzing in to write a book about their own culture and history.

Verdict: It sounded good in the initial description I read, but it was disappointing in the end. Buy an extra copy of The Emperor's Riddle by Kat Zhang instead. Not recommended.

ISBN: 9781338118551; Published 2017 by Scholastic/Chicken House; Borrowed from another library in my consortium
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Signalé
JeanLittleLibrary | Jan 26, 2018 |

Statistiques

Œuvres
9
Membres
145
Popularité
#142,479
Évaluation
3.8
Critiques
2
ISBN
14
Langues
1

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