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The Serpent's Spell
 
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The Serpent's Spell [Paperback]

Rae Bridgman
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 16.95
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Product Description

Books in Canada

Ten-year-old orphaned cousins, William Wychwood and Sophie Isidor, are definitely not your average fifth graders. For one thing, Wil “but with one l, not with two,” and Sophie with her cat, Cadmus, live in Middlegate. That’s the mysterious world of Winnipeg author Rae Bridgman, where buses can drive through brick walls, leaning houses dot streets with names like Half Moon Lane and Wog’s Hollow, and Egbertine & Son in their shop near Grunion Square occasionally speak French to their customers. The cousins’ school, the four-hundred-and-ninety-four-year-old Gruffud’s Academy, is out of this world too. Here, teachers like Mage Adderson, Mage Quartz, and Mage Terpsy, teach subjects like numeristics, botanicals, cartology, and verbology from textbooks like Magykal Spelling, Grammar and Palaver, and use spells to prevent students from cheating. There are rules too; for instance, there is to be no magic off campus, “no practising of magic in the hallways,” and no eating except in the west wing of Stone Hall. In the library, which is connected to Stone Hall by a tunnel, a lisping Miss Heese rules the roost with her puffy “white curly hair, which reminded Wil of Dandelion fluff.” She hisses out her “four simple rulesss”, including “No noissse,” while Wil “but with one l, not with two,” covertly leafs through The Golden Wing: A History of All Creatures Magykal, while a “tower of books” floats above the counter, and a playful ghost, Peeping Peerslie, plays practical jokes on library patrons of all ages. Overseeing Gruffud’s goings-on are the stone carvings and statues of snakes and the talking gargoyles, Portia and Portius, with their animated braids of writhing snakes. There are lots more snakes as well in the nearby town of Narcisse, hibernating and gestating in their hibernaculums. But someone, as Wil and Sophie find out, is committing serpicide, wantonly killing the snakes. So who, how and why becomes the mystery the one-l-Wil and his cousin Sophie have to solve.
Snakes, however, aren’t the only victims in Bridgman’s superb page-turning flight of fancy. Sophie’s dad mysteriously disappeared after the murder of a librarian at the Academy, leaving her to cope with the suspicion of, and ostracism by, her classmates. And Wil’s beloved Gran has recently died in a fire, leaving Wil not only with just the one l in his name but also with a horrible dream of a shadowy figure running away from the flames. The two kids know that Aunt Rue and Aunt Violet, who are raising them now, are keeping secrets from them as well. When the aunts learn of the serpent-embossed medallion and gold ring Wil wears around his neck, they warn him, “Beware the Serpent’s Chain,” without telling him what the “Serpent’s Chain” is. So the l-deprived Wil and the clear-minded Sophie have lots to keep them occupied. Sophie’s Cadmus hates Wil’s pet snake, Esme. Classmates, the twins Sylvain and Sygnithia Sly, despise the cousins and do everything they can to upset their lives. Every book in the library with references to the “Serpent’s Chain” has the relevant pages torn out. At school Wil and Sophie have to master tongue-twisting incantations and tricky spells, separate “dingleberries” from poisonous and edible ones, put up with Peeping Peerslie’s pranks, and puzzle out the identities of the two persons in the skeleton costumes and why they were fighting in the washroom at the Halloween Masquerade Ball. Then they have to escape kidnappers-not once, but twice-to hide and recover Wil’s amulet and ring, and to allay their growing suspicions about whether Erro Sibelius Skelch, the Minister of the Secretariat on the Status of Magykal Creatures is truly the champion for the Narcisse snakes or really just a snake in the grass.
With Miss Heese’s sibilant sentences, and Mage Terpsy’s “tipsy-terpies” in her sentences (clop in the tass for top in the class, for example), with Wil getting dog poop stuck on his shoe and his tongue stuck on a frost-covered metal pole, and with his fumbling attempts at the games of ditchball and snapdragon, there is a lot of fun to be enjoyed before the serpicide mystery is solved. There is also a great deal of useful information about snakes, their habits and habitats. Finally, Bridgman’s spellbinding story has sentence after sentence of melodiously evocative language. For example, on the field trip to Narcisse on “one of those sweltering September days-summer’s last gasp” when the “bus barrelled along the open road. Pastures gave way to flat fields of rippling wheat, and bales of hay-huge, round biscuits-dotted the horizon.” If it’s exquisitely told spells that you’re after, The Serpent’s Spell has more than enough for even the most discriminating and insatiable reader.
M. Wayne Cunningham (Books in Canada)

Product Description

The Serpent's Spell is a teen fiction novel about the power of friendship and the mysteries surrounding the snakes of Narcisse, Manitoba. Calamity-prone Wil Wychwood and supernatural artist Sophie Isidor live in the hidden town of MiddleGate. Hundreds of snakes in nearby Narcisse have been murdered, and the cousins set out on a journey to discover who could have done it...

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Customer Reviews

2 Reviews
5 star:
 (1)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:    (0)
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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars Courtesy of Teens Read Too, Aug 25 2007
This review is from: The Serpent's Spell (Paperback)
William Wychwood was born to a magical family, but he doesn't know this until fifth grade, when he and his pet snake, Esme, must go to live with his aunts and his cousin Sophie whom he has never met. They live in Middlegate, a village that is hidden inside Winnipeg, Manitoba, and entered through a magical gate. Wil and Sophie enroll in school at Gruffud's Academy, where the curriculum includes classes that you and I never had in school; numeristics, verbology, and botanicals may have some parallels to modern classes, but they are quite different. One of the favorite games is snapdragon, a battle of wits between shadows.

Wil and Sophie are concerned about the deaths of hundreds of the sacred snakes of Narcisse, and they decide to try to find out what happened to these wonderful creatures. While on a field trip to see the snakes, Wil and Sophie discover a clue and begin a magical journey of exciting adventures.

Wil has a magical medallion that his grandmother had entrusted to him before she died in a suspicious fire, and it may have something to do with the mystery of the snakes. The kids encounter danger with kidnappings, serpents, evil magic, and shadow duals. In this very imaginative fantasy, Bridgman adds a numeristic table of contents, Latin verbiage, and sketchings that bring the magic of snakes and sorcery alive. The characters are exciting and fresh, and the plot is fast-paced and creative.

Reviewed by: Grandma Bev
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5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful story, Aug 12 2006
By 
Boston (Boston, MA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Serpent's Spell (Paperback)
The Serpent's Spell is an amazing book. My pre-teen son throughly enjoyed reading this and the following comments are from him. "There is wonderful character development and descriptions. The magic they practice is stunning and the allies are described perfectly. The icing on this gorgeous cake is the astonishing mystery and a plot that twists and turns like a snake itself. One of the coolest things about the book is the inclusion of a Latin phrase with an English translation at the start of every chapter. This story is an exquisite work of art. I would recommend Serpent's Spell to anyone and everyone."
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 4.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)

5.0 out of 5 stars imaginative tale, Sep 7 2006
By Reader Views "Reviews, by readers, for readers" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Serpent's Spell (Paperback)
Reviewed by Regan Windsor for Reader Views (9/06)


Welcome to Gruffud's Academy, where the curriculum includes numeristics, verbology, and botanicals and the students learn to play games such as snapdragon; a battle of wits between shadows. The academy is located in a mystical pocket of Winnipeg in the secret city of Middlegate.

Wil arrives at Middlegate from Toronto with nothing except the clothes on his back, his snake Esme, and the medallion and ring his grandmother has given him. A fire has caused her death and he is sent to live with a set of aunts and cousin he was until now unaware of. Their existence, however, turns out to be the first of many family secrets Wil is soon to discover.

As Wil and his cousin Sophie begin the school year, a cloud of mystery surrounds the slaughter of hundreds of snakes in the nearby pits of Narcisse. While on a fieldtrip to see the snakes, Wil and Sophie stumble upon a discovery which begins a magical journey of friendship and adventure.

Things soon begin to turn dangerous as they search for the significance of Wil's medallion and its implication in the mysterious circumstances that ensue. With kidnappings, sorcery, serpents, and shadow duals the reader is left breathless with anticipation.

"The Serpent's Spell" is a delight for all readers! Rae Bridgman adds sorceress zeal with a numeristic table of contents, Latin verbiage, and sketchings that bring the magic of snakes and sorcery alive. In a novel destined to be the next Harry Potter of fantasy, Bridgman delivers a festively imaginative tale. As this first adventure ends, the reader is left with one key question....when will the next adventure begin?

Book received at no charge.

1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Courtesy of Teens Read Too, Dec 11 2006
By TeensReadToo "Eat. Drink. Read. Be Merrier." - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Serpent's Spell (Paperback)
William Wychwood was born to a magical family, but he doesn't know this until fifth grade, when he and his pet snake, Esme, must go to live with his aunts and his cousin Sophie whom he has never met. They live in Middlegate, a village that is hidden inside Winnipeg, Manitoba, and entered through a magical gate. Wil and Sophie enroll in school at Gruffud's Academy, where the curriculum includes classes that you and I never had in school; numeristics, verbology, and botanicals may have some parallels to modern classes, but they are quite different. One of the favorite games is snapdragon, a battle of wits between shadows.

Wil and Sophie are concerned about the deaths of hundreds of the sacred snakes of Narcisse, and they decide to try to find out what happened to these wonderful creatures. While on a field trip to see the snakes, Wil and Sophie discover a clue and begin a magical journey of exciting adventures.

Wil has a magical medallion that his grandmother had entrusted to him before she died in a suspicious fire, and it may have something to do with the mystery of the snakes. The kids encounter danger with kidnappings, serpents, evil magic, and shadow duals. In this very imaginative fantasy, Bridgman adds a numeristic table of contents, Latin verbiage, and sketchings that bring the magic of snakes and sorcery alive. The characters are exciting and fresh, and the plot is fast-paced and creative.

Reviewed by: Grandma Bev
 Go to Amazon U.S. to see both reviews  4.5 out of 5 stars 
 
 
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