The Witch’s Boy essentially opens with two little boys who decide to take a raft out on the river and to the sea. Tragedy strikes and one of the boys dies, while the other is left behind. The boy’s mother, a witch, sews his dead brother’s soul to his body and so, Ned, finds words jumbled up when he reads and when he speaks. Despite this, he’s a good boy, brave and pure of heart. Meanwhile, a Bandit King comes along to steal the magic of Ned’s mother, because she has the only magic left in the world in a jar in her house.
The Witch’s Boy by Kelly Barnhill | Book Review
August 28, 2014
Filed Under: book reviews Tagged With: Algonquin Young Readers, Book Review, Fantasy, Kelly Barnhill, middle grade
The Mostly True Story Of Jack Kelly Barnhill Book Review
December 7, 2011
The Mostly True Story Of Jack by Kelly Barnhill is what I would consider to be a deeply unsettling book, especially for middle grade. Now, being unsettled isn’t bad. I’m still actually thinking about The Mostly True Story Of Jack. Kelly Barnhill’s writing plays on people’s fears without overt monsters.
Filed Under: book reviews Tagged With: Book Review, cybils, Fantasy, Kelly Barnhill, Little Brown Young Readers, middle grade, The Mostly True Story Of Jack