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Amber Ambrosia
 
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Amber Ambrosia [Paperback]

Rae Bridgman
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
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Product Description

Books in Canada

They’re back. All those marvellous characters from Winnipeg author Rae Bridgman’s highly successful first novel, The Serpent’s Spell, are indeed back. Amber Ambrosia is Bridgman’s equally entertaining second book in the MiddleGate series. We reencounter ten-year-old Wil (with one l) Wychwood, his pet snake, Esme, his mentor, Mr. Bertram, his ten-year-old cousin, Sophie Isidor, their aunts, Violet and Rue, their Gruffud’s Academy teachers Mage Tibor (cartology), Mage Adderson (numeristics) and Mage Terpsy (verbology), and the Academy’s “two-faced stone Gatekeeper,” Portia and Portius, and even the sleazy, distrusted Minister Skelch and Wil’s decidedly evil enemy, Rufus Crookshank. New characters have been added as well. And with a whole new set of exciting adventures to keep them all as busy as bees, it’s a novel definitely worth reading.
While snakes predominated in The Serpent’s Spell, magiykalis are at the centre of Amber Ambrosia. But whether it’s bees or snakes that drive the action, the story still involves magyck with a ‘y’, the Secretariat for the Status of Magical Creatures, Wil’s medallion with its strange inscriptions, Sophie’s magical glasses with colours to match her moods, Aunt Vi’s references to Hedda’s Horoscopes and her tasseomancy readings, academic activities at Gruffud’s, strange goings-on in MiddleGate, and the behind the scenes shenanigans of Rufus Crookshank and his new partner. While Aunt Rue is busy keeping secrets regarding what she knows about the bees from her confidential government work, Wil and Sophie busily puzzle over the apiponis destructor. They drop in on Mage Radix in his beekeeping lab at the Academy, sample exotic honey at market stalls, and visit new neighbours, the clairvoyant Mrs. Hester Bain and her twins Beatriz and Phinneas whom Sophie felt “were going to be their friends forever.” It’s a friendship Sophie and Wil sorely need when they get a bee’s eye view of the world after they are magically transformed into bees and buzz into the City of Wax and the Great Nest. There they escape from a life-and-death battle with Rogue-Bee and Pale-Bee before morphing back into their human forms with massive doses of help from the twins. It’s an action-packed story abuzz with excitement and suspense.
As usual Bridgman’s characters bear unique names like Mrs. Flyboottom, Mrs. Clop, Mr. Redelmeier, and Lucretia Daggar. MiddleGate has its memorable sites like Half Moon Lane and Gruffud’s Academy, and events like the Dragon Fly Festival, and when necessary, as in the bee episodes of the story, a whole new universe and vocabulary of Sister Bees and Brother Drones with Bee-Veins and Bee-Bodies and a “joyous Buzzhum of the Bees” musically unfolds for believers in magic and mystery. As well, there are enough questions left over to ensure a number of future novels. For example, why won’t Aunts Rue and Violet tell anyone how old they are, “for snake’s sake”? And will Sophie’s Dad ever return to clear his name? And will Aunt Violet set up her new Auntie Vi’s Fortune Telling shop? And what about Wil and Sophie’s “friends forever” Beatriz and Phinneas? And will Rufus Crookshank resurface under a new identity and with new evildoers in tow even though he’s “in the hands of the Firecatchers-for good”? So, another volume is definitely possible, even to be hoped for, since as Wil says, “We know the Serpent’s Chain is back . . . but it’s like a big rattlesnake coiled in the corner of the room, and everyone is pretending like it really isn’t there.” So what next, Ms. Bridgman, what next?
M. Wayne Cunningham (Books in Canada)

Book Description

Ten-year-old cousins Sophie and Wil face a long and endless summer, until they find out MiddleGate’s honeybees are falling sick. Even the Secretariat on the Status of Magical Creatures seems unable to solve the mystery. Fearing for Aunt Rue’s position at the Secretariat, Wil and Sophie decide to find out who – or what – is attacking the insects after the symbol of a golden bee suddenly appears on Wil’s black medallion.

The children are cast into the secret world of the magical honeybees of MiddleGate; a world where Magykalis honey transforms those who consume it and portends a future when the Serpent’s Chain — a secret magical society — returns to power from Realms Unearthly, Realms of Myth.


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5.0 out of 5 stars (1 customer review)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars Courtesy of Teens Read Too, Nov 3 2008
This review is from: Amber Ambrosia (Paperback)
AMBER AMBROSIA is the second book in the MIDDLEGATE fantasy series by Rae Bridgman I had to read the first, THE SERPENT'S SPELL, in order to enjoy the second, and I did enjoy both.

Wil is an orphan. His parents died in a car crash when he was young and he has since been living with his grandmother. A few months earlier, though, his grandmother died in a fire, but before she did she had given him a medallion that had a snake on it.

He is then transported to Manitoba, to a secret city within, called Middlegate. Here he meets his relatives that he didn't know he had, two aunts and a cousin, whose birthday is the same as his. His cousin, Sophie, has had tragedy in her life also. When she was small, her father and her mother disappeared. It is believed that her father murdered a man.

So both kids are now living with their aunts, Rue and Violet. Aunt Rue works for the government and Aunt Violet is loving but strange. Oh, and did I mention that Middlegate is a enclave for wizards? Yes, both Sophie and Wil are wizards. They go to the Gruffud's Academy, which is a lot like Hogwarts but a day school instead of a boarding school.

In the first book, the two cousins save the snakes of Narcisse from extinction and put an evil villain in jail. At the opening of the second book, it is summer vacation and the two are bored with the thought of many hot, dreary days ahead of them.

Then a mystery appears. It seems that the magical bees are dying. The kids get a job helping out one of the teachers from the school with his beehives and get transported into the land of bees. They find out that the dangerous criminal they put away in the first book has escaped and could be behind the mystery.

I enjoyed the odd parts of the book, such as the eyeglasses that Sophie wears that change color with her moods. Wil and Sophie's relationship is much tighter and a great friendship is growing. The two also meet another set of twins and I believe that a foursome will develop to help with the mysteries.

I would like some more explanation of what the Serpent's Chain is and also why Rufus Crookshank is so bad. But all in all, a good read.

Reviewed by: Marta Morrison
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Amazon.com: 5.0 out of 5 stars (1 customer review)

5.0 out of 5 stars Courtesy of Teens Read Too, Nov 3 2008
By TeensReadToo "Eat. Drink. Read. Be Merrier." - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Amber Ambrosia (Paperback)
AMBER AMBROSIA is the second book in the MIDDLEGATE fantasy series by Rae Bridgman I had to read the first, THE SERPENT'S SPELL, in order to enjoy the second, and I did enjoy both.

Wil is an orphan. His parents died in a car crash when he was young and he has since been living with his grandmother. A few months earlier, though, his grandmother died in a fire, but before she did she had given him a medallion that had a snake on it.

He is then transported to Manitoba, to a secret city within, called Middlegate. Here he meets his relatives that he didn't know he had, two aunts and a cousin, whose birthday is the same as his. His cousin, Sophie, has had tragedy in her life also. When she was small, her father and her mother disappeared. It is believed that her father murdered a man.

So both kids are now living with their aunts, Rue and Violet. Aunt Rue works for the government and Aunt Violet is loving but strange. Oh, and did I mention that Middlegate is a enclave for wizards? Yes, both Sophie and Wil are wizards. They go to the Gruffud's Academy, which is a lot like Hogwarts but a day school instead of a boarding school.

In the first book, the two cousins save the snakes of Narcisse from extinction and put an evil villain in jail. At the opening of the second book, it is summer vacation and the two are bored with the thought of many hot, dreary days ahead of them.

Then a mystery appears. It seems that the magical bees are dying. The kids get a job helping out one of the teachers from the school with his beehives and get transported into the land of bees. They find out that the dangerous criminal they put away in the first book has escaped and could be behind the mystery.

I enjoyed the odd parts of the book, such as the eyeglasses that Sophie wears that change color with her moods. Wil and Sophie's relationship is much tighter and a great friendship is growing. The two also meet another set of twins and I believe that a foursome will develop to help with the mysteries.

I would like some more explanation of what the Serpent's Chain is and also why Rufus Crookshank is so bad. But all in all, a good read.

Reviewed by: Marta Morrison
 Go to Amazon U.S. to see the review  5.0 out of 5 stars 
 
 
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