From School Library Journal
Grade 5-6 In this sequel to the fantasy The Dark Green Tunnel (Little, 1984), twins Lara and Barnaby get lost in an airport corridor and find themselves back in the land of Mesmeria. During their short absence, hundreds of Mesmerian years have passed, and the evil sorcerer Krumpp has imprisoned the good witch Mag Namodder and taken over the land. The twins must search for a magic wand with which to confront Krumpp in his Black Castle. All that readers learn about Lara is that she cries at tense moments and is an apprentice sorcerer; she has no distinct personality. Eckert is clearly an admirer of C. S. Lewis' "Narnia" books, but he lacks Lewis' skill at creating and populating new worlds. Although his ideas are ingenious, they do not blend into a whole. Readers miss the sense of entering a new country with its own past and future. In addition, Eckert's style is too bland to create a mood, so that tension arises merely from the pace of the plot. The book is illustrated with numerous soft black-and-white drawings, plus four illustrations in full color. Unfortunately these four are placed several pages before the action they illustrate. Ruth S. Vose, San Francisco Public Library
Copyright 1986 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Book Description
The Wand is the exciting sequel to The Dark Green Tunnel!
The twins, Lara and Barnaby, find a new way back into Mesmeria, but in a time frame different than originally. The good Queen Mag Namodder has been kidnapped by the evil King of Bluggia and will die unless the twins and their friends can rescue her. In the effort, they encounter many dreadful hazards...and Lara becomes a witch.