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Carbonel and Calidor (1978)

par Barbara Sleigh

Séries: Carbonel (3)

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When Calidor rejects his life of ease as heir to the throne of Cat Country to apprentice with the hostile Broomhurst witches, his father, Carbonel, sends his human friends Rosemary and John to talk sense into the royal prince.
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The 3rd and I think final Carbonel book. Not the best one, but it is still good fun and the cat's eyes coming alive is a scene I have remembered for the last 35 years for some reason! ( )
  AlisonSakai | Jan 3, 2017 |
This third volume came out 18 years after the second, the Kingdom of Carbonel, and doesn't quite update convincingly to the 1970s; the children are a little too old in the illustrations, too. Yet the ingredients of Sleigh's magic cauldron are still bubbling well, and the story moves pacily enough to its inevitably happy ending.
  PollyMoore3 | Oct 25, 2015 |
Z loved the Carbonel series. I was sort of ready for it to be done by book three. But, if you're looking for British-y, 1950's stories about regal cats and mostly bumbling witches (and two brave buddies), they're great. ( )
  beckydj | Mar 31, 2013 |
Not as good as the first two, in that there were less interesting characters, but just as much good action and plotting. Still, a good, fun read, and a nice way to end this trilogy. ( )
  JimmyChanga | Jul 13, 2010 |
This is the third book in the Carbonel trilogy; I read the first two as a youngster, but my library didn't have the third book. This is my first time reading it.

As Rosemary and John reunite to spend a third summer together, the King of Cats, Carbonel shows up. As usual, he wants something from his faithful human friends. The children find a magic ring that enable them to hear Carbonel, and he tells them his tale of woe: his son and heir, Calidor, has abandoned the royal family and become a witch's minion. When witches are about, dark magic is sure to follow, especially when the evil cat-queen Grisania from a nearby town plots Carbonel's demise. It's Rosemary and John to the rescue, along with hopping brooms, walking road reflectors, and a whole mess of cats.

I didn't like this book as much, and not just because of the missing nostalgia factor. In a lot of ways, it didn't make sense. For one, John and Rosemary forget about Carbonel throughout the rest of the year; presumably, magic makes them forget, but it's incredibly sad for them to have these amazing adventures and remember almost nothing. I mean, they wouldn't remember why they were friends, or how Rosemary met her stepfather, and all sorts of other life-changing events. Also, the second book ended with them messing a bit with the space-time continuum... As a kid, I didn't mind that, even though it would mean Carbonel never met them. But in the third book, the issue makes even less sense, and then the book uses the exact same sort of ending!

Maybe this book is disjointed because of the time span involved. The first book came out in 1955, the second in 1960, and this one in 1978 (John even wears bellbottoms on the cover). Each book in the series could stand completely on its own since all the characters forget everything that happened before (which seems like a total cop-out to me, like saying it was all a dream). Maybe the author forgot or didn't have a copy of the other books handy? I think I would have been very disappointed as a kid, so I'm kind of glad I found this as an adult and have a bit more perspective. ... But I'm still really disappointed. ( )
  ladycato | May 17, 2010 |
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When Calidor rejects his life of ease as heir to the throne of Cat Country to apprentice with the hostile Broomhurst witches, his father, Carbonel, sends his human friends Rosemary and John to talk sense into the royal prince.

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