A Tale of Magic... (A Tale of Magic, #1) by Chris Colfer | Goodreads
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A Tale of Magic #1

A Tale of Magic...

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A new series set in the Land of Stories universe from the #1 New York Times bestselling author, Chris Colfer, perfect for new and old fans!

Fourteen-year-old Brystal Evergreen has always known she was destined for great things--that is, if she can survive the oppressive Southern Kingdom. Her only escape are books, but since it's illegal for women to read in her country, she has to find creative ways of acquiring them. Working as a maid at her local library gives her the perfect excuse to be near them and allows her to sneak a few titles home when no one is looking. But one day Brystal uncovers a secret section of the library and finds a book about magic that changes her life forever.

Magic is despised and outlawed throughout the world--Brystal is well aware of the severe consequences the book may bring--but her curiosity gets the best of her. By reading some of the text aloud, strange phenomena begin to occur and Brystal discovers she is capable of magic! And the more she practices it, the harder it becomes to hide.

After being caught and convicted, Brystal is saved by a mysterious woman named Madame Weatherberry. The woman takes Brystal to her Academy of Magic and teaches her to become a fairy. While Brystal studies magic and befriends the other students, Madame Weatherberry is suddenly called away on suspicious matters. When she doesn't return, Brystal and her friends work together to find and save their instructor. Along the way, the students discover Madame Weatherberry's true intentions for the academy are not what they seem, and they come face to face with a sinister plot that puts the fate of the world, and the fate of magic itself, in grave danger...

481 pages, Kindle Edition

First published October 1, 2019

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About the author

Chris Colfer

42 books10.4k followers
Chris Colfer is an Emmy-nominated and Golden Globe-winning actor best-known for his portrayal of Kurt Hummel on the FOX television series "Glee".

He is also a New York Times bestselling author whose books include the first three novels in the "Land of Stories" series ("The Wishing Spell", "The Enchantress Returns" and "A Grimm Warning") as well as "Struck By Lightning: The Carson Philips Journal" which is a novelization based on the script he wrote for the film "Struck By Lighting" (Colfer also co-produced and starred in that movie).

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5 stars
12,062 (53%)
4 stars
6,437 (28%)
3 stars
2,637 (11%)
2 stars
889 (3%)
1 star
559 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 1,871 reviews
Profile Image for Tucker  (TuckerTheReader).
908 reviews1,707 followers
November 23, 2020
[3/15/2020] - I JUST FINISHED MY RE-READ AND IT WAS JUST AS GOOD AS IT WAS THE FIRST TIME AHHHHHHHHH

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[10/09/2019] - AHHHHHHHHHHHH! THAT WAS SO SURPRISINGLY GOOD!! WILL I EVER STOP YELLING? PROBABLY NOT

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[10/03/19] - THE TALE BEGINS NOW!!

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HOLY FREAKING SHIRTBALLS!!!!!!! ANOTHER SERIES!!!! THAT COVER!!!!!!!!!! AAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH

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Want to read
July 25, 2019
i don’t care if this is middle grade and i’m a junior in high school, IM GOING TO READ THIS. and that cover,,, 😍
Profile Image for Matt.
4,055 reviews12.9k followers
April 18, 2020
Receiving a strong recommendation to try this book, I set about reading it with Neo during the early stages of our COVID-19 isolation (where I spun it to be part of his language arts curriculum as I called it ‘creating reading’). While were were both enthralled with it, I can only read so much at a time, so we were advancing at a pace more suited to the attention span and sit down abilities of an eight-year-old. With Neo’s permission, I took the leap to listen to the audiobook on my own, which has Chris Colfer narrating his own piece. What an adventure it has turned out to be! Brystal Evergreen is a precocious girl who does not like the severity of the laws in the Southern Kingdom. As a young woman, she is not allowed to do anything but learn how to be a good wife to her future husband, which includes no reading whatsoever. Pushing the limits, she acquires a job as an evening maid in the town library, where she can read to her heart’s content when no one is around. She discovers a secret collection of books and begins reading them, though they have all been banned. When she comes upon one all about magic, she is intrigued and begins reading aloud, only to discover that she triggers something upon uttering an incantation for testing faeries. Unsure what to do with this knowledge, Brystal tries it again one night, but is caught and hauled off to jail, where she is sent through the legal system in quick order. When someone shows her a crumb of mercy, she is shipped off to a work camp rather than be executed for her crimes. Misery has a new name and Brystal soon discovers it in the form of her new residence. She is sure to die in this place with nothing and no one around her, save one sweet young girl. One morning, Madame Celeste Weatherberry comes to the work camp with an order from King Champion XIV to have Brystal released into her care. Madame Weatherberry takes Brystal with her and explains that magic is by no means the evil thing that she has been told. Madame Weatherberry has plans to create an academy where young people can hone their skills. As Brystal helps Madame Weatherberry find other new recruits who will bring a number of unique skills to the academy, news of a problem comes from the north, forcing Brystal to hold down the fort. What evil awaits in the Northern Kingdom and how will Brystal and her new friends conquer it with their new-found powers? The reader is pushed into the middle of quite the adventure, with all the creatures that make fantasy worth the read (and this coming from a guy who steers clear of this genre most of the time). A great story for young adult fans who enjoy something with a bit more fantasy to it. Recommended to those readers, as well as the young at heart.

I was surprised when I made the connection that Chris Colfer was an actor whose work I used to enjoy. However, what astonished me even more was the quality of the book which is said to be for young adults, as well as its ‘fantasy’ genre. I could not get enough of the story, whose plots were so well developed with a narrative that made me want to know more. Neo was fully committed as well, asking me when we could “read more magic”, which goes to show that Colfer has a knack for writing. Brystal Evergreen is surely the central character in this piece, but there are many others who bring their own flavouring to the story and keep the reader hooked. Each character has their own backstory, which serves as a piece of the larger puzzle. Just scanning all that I learned here, there is lots to develop in the coming novels of this series. Colfer keeps things in the realm of fantasy, but does not push things into the silly. There will be ogres and trolls, dwarves, and faeries, but it does not get hokey, even to the adult population, which is something that usually keeps me away from these types of stories. Colfer fills his writing with themes the reader can enjoy and morals that prove useful and relatable by the modern teen reader. I look forward to seeing where things will go, especially with some of the revelations in the latter portion of the book. I purposely kept the above summary vague, so as not to spill too much and force the curious reader to dive in. Trust me, it is worth it and hints of the next book make me wish I had the magic to speed up time.

Kudos, Mr Colfer, for an intriguing piece that left me hungering for more. Perhaps I will dabble into some of your earlier work while I wait.

Love/hate the review? An ever-growing collection of others appears at:
http://pecheyponderings.wordpress.com/

A Book for All Seasons, a different sort of Book Challenge: https://www.goodreads.com/group/show/...
34 reviews3 followers
January 13, 2020
I have a lot of thoughts on this book and am frankly disappointed. I enjoyed the Land of Stories books to a certain extent and this story had good potential. But there were several aspects of this book that I cannot forgive. So be prepared for a rant.

First and foremost, this book might have gotten a 2 or possibly a 3-star rating for me had it not been for one unforgivable sin, plagiarism. Some of it was so blatant that I am in actual shock that no one else seems to have noticed or cared. Is it because Colfer is a celebrity author and preaching a message of tolerance that everyone else is just willing to ignore the fact that he stole ideas from other authors? Well I’m calling BS! Let’s talk about the most egregious incident first because it’s the one that tipped me off to all of the others.

Our main protagonist, Brystal, is given a wand to help her with her “magiclexia” (more on that later). Something amazing happens when she receives her wand and she asks what it means. “It means we can expect great things from you, Miss Evergreen.” This is a direct ripoff of Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s/Sorcerer’s Stone when Harry receives his wand and Olivander tells him that we can expect great things from you... I can’t be the only one who noticed this, right? After that I kept seeing reminders of stories I had read or movies I had seen. And there are a lot of details lifted from HP. Like a school dining hall’s ceiling enchanted to look like the night sky. Or the headmistress’ ulterior motives in training Brystal to defeat the Snow Queen. But HP isn’t the only victim here. I’m fairly confident the scene where all of the students pile into Brystal’s bed for story time is from A Little Princess (at least the movie version from the 90s). Bootstrap Academy feels an awful lot like a combination of Oliver Twist and the school in Jane Eyre. And though I can’t remember where, I am confident I’ve seen the scene where we take a long text filled with negative messages and destroy portions to form a new positive message in a movie before.

I wish I could end there, but I can’t. We also have to talk about the atrocious writing that went on in this book. Authors should show us what is going on, not tell us. So instead of saying “character was embarrassed by the others’ comments,” you should write “character blushed, dropped her eyes and was quiet for the remainder of the evening.” Colfer just kept TELLING what was happening! It was like a nervous tic. Some of it I blame on his editor. After all, he occasionally went on to do the showing, but it had been spoiled by the telling. Some examples:
“The girls were surprised by Brystal’s recognition. They pretended to be annoyed by the opportunity, but deep down, Brystal could tell the were eager for the attention.”
“Clearly the housekeeper thought her suspicion was a brand-new discovery.”
I could hardly go three pages without him telling me how people felt or worse telling me what they were going to do before they did it. And not just spoilers, he also summarizes content over and over again. We just read Xanthos’ story two chapters ago, are you really going to recite it again for Lucy? The beginning of chapter thirteen is literally a summary of what Brystal just learnered at the end of chapter twelve.

Colfer’s messages were also confusing. I thought the message about witches v fairies was going to be about actions. As in magic is a neutral, innate ability that can be used for good or evil. And it’s the way magic is used (good v evil) that determines whether someone is a “fairy” or a “witch.” But then it got muddled with the Sorceress swinging both ways. Now witchcraft is a “preference” and there’s no such thing as right or wrong. Except there are still evils in the book, so I can’t figure out what the heck his point is.

Also, the end is really bad. The whole book keeps preaching about changing people’s opinions through kindness and compassion, but in the end our heroes force the magical community’s acceptance by issuing ultimatums and manipulation. Brystal decries those who edit history to meet their own ends, but does exactly that by suppressing the truth about the Snow Queen’s identity. Why is it ok for Brystal to do this, but not the justices? I would applaud Colfer if he meant to provoke these types of discussions, but that’s clearly not his point. Brystal is the ultimate good in this story. Yes, the Snow Queen comes back in the later series, but Brystal is never confronted about her deception in the matter. Brystal is motivated by compassion and is seeking to end prejudice and discrimination, so editing history, manipulating the facts for her own group’s benefit is cool.

Colfer’s preaching is also obnoxious. We all get it, magic=homosexuality. And people cannot help having “magic,” they’re born that way and they simply cannot stop themselves from expressing it. But Colfer pushes the message so hard that some things stop making sense within the series. Fairy names that were cute and make sense when they’re the product of fairy families giving their children cutesy fairy names are bizarre. You’re telling me magic-hating families named their children “Tangerina” or “Skylene” or “Emerelda?” And how many times can one character or another preach the same message over and over again. Once again, quit telling me nothing is wrong about “magic” and that such natural impulses should not be discriminated against and SHOW ME! Combined with his statement that in the prologue that repetition is necessary for slow learners, I can only assume Colfer thinks his readers are idiots with the number of times he thinks it’s necessary to repeat the same mantra.

I would also like to talk about Colfer’s treatment of the justices and others who discriminate against the magical community. As an author, Colfer typically spends a lot of time making his villains sympathetic. They have backstories that explain how past hurt led to the current evil conduct. But that’s not true of characters like the justices or the Edgars. They’re not even true believers in their cause, they’re simply greedy and mean. There’s no backstory about how the magical community hurt the non-magical community or how these characters were personally treated poorly and so now act out of their hurt. Nope, they’re just mean, greedy and power-hungry. In fact, any perceived hurt by the magical community was simply manufactured to fit the justices evil ends.

Another bad message is about always the importance of happiness. Don’t get me wrong happiness is nice, but there are times when other things are more important than any individual’s happiness. As a mother, I know that sometimes my children’s well-being must come before my happiness or even their own. Sometimes what will make you happy now will lead you to misery in the end. So sometimes we must forfeit our happiness.

Colfer’s understanding of history and taboos are equally flawed. He presents a simplistic view of the origin of persecution that is frankly insulting. No, there was never a council of elders that sat down and asked “how can we best oppress this group of people?” “Or how can we exploit the weak and downtrodden for our own gain?” The Bible was not rewritten so the straight community could oppress the gay community. Good or bad, motivations are rarely that simplistic. And treating them as such ignores the actual root causes of prejudice. If we ignore the economic crisis that pre-Nazi Germany was facing we can never truly understand the rise of Nazism or the final solution to exterminate the Jews. We must acknowledge that taboos against homosexuality have an origin outside of basic ignorance and prejudice (e.g. the procreation of our species). How can we ever truly address it otherwise? It’s easy to paint those who hurt us or those we disagree with about fundamentally as being ignorant and motivated by bad things like greed and a thirst for power. But you’ve done nothing for your cause of acceptance and tolerance.

I also don’t think he’s ever actually experienced any of the forms of persecution or discrimination he described in the book other than a disapproving father. Frankly his depiction of oppressed women is insulting. This is not how women are or were oppressed historically. I mean how oppressed could Brystal be, she managed to do all her housework, go to school, clean an entire library by herself and read a whole floor’s worth of books in a month.

Brystal is also an insufferable heroine. She has no faults, unless you include an easily cured disorder. She is the best, most powerful fairy ever, but she’s also perfectly kind, loves to read, treats others with compassion and recognizes oppression while living in ignorance. She is patient and capable and when she occasionally over-reacts it’s only because others expect too much from her. She also has the perfect canned response for literally everyone and every situation. Who can relate to a character like that?

And now for the nitpicking. Magiclexia, sigh. I know that it’s supposed to be a reference to dyslexia, but he picked the wrong half of the word. “Lexia” refers to words, whereas “dys” refers to poor or inadequate. So magiclexia is “magic words?” Dysmagica would make more sense a dysfunctional sense of magic. But God forbid we actually understand words before we use them!

And while we’re at it, the anachronisms and modern nonsense was constantly eye-roll worthy. They made sense in his other series where the events were taking place at the same time as our modern history and involved characters who moved back and forth between worlds, thus explaining the influence. Bu this predates the interactions and takes place in a era similar to our own medieval or possibly renaissance period. Yet we have stupid comments like Brystal made a cake “from scratch.” Do they have box cake mixes? Lucy has a bottle cap necklace. They have bottle caps? Characters comment about creepy fonts, do they have word processing?
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Miranda Reads.
1,589 reviews162k followers
Want to read
February 24, 2020
When your paycheck hits...and you have the weakest of weak wills....and there goes my paycheck...just goes right to books...
Profile Image for Raquel Estebaran.
299 reviews239 followers
November 27, 2021
Novela infantil/juvenil de magia y aventuras.

Muy entretenida, con buenos personajes y una ambientación coherente, y en la que se resaltan valores como la compasión y la tolerancia.
Profile Image for Erica.
256 reviews
December 31, 2019
OMG! This book was so amazing. I have so many feels. I just want to devour it again and again. And wow, what a mother fucking plot twist! I wasn't expecting that at all. I definitely recommend this to anyone who loves a book about magic, unbreakable friendship, and boundless compassion.
Profile Image for Feyre.
1,186 reviews115 followers
July 16, 2020
"Ignorance is a choice. Hatred is a choice. Violence is a choice. But someone's existence is never a choice, or a fault, and it's certainly not a crime."

Forget Hogwarts, I am going to Madame Berryweather's!
I loved every page of this! (After getting over the disappointment of this not continuing where The Land od Stories ended.) I ended up loving this one even more. It's set completetly in the Land of Stories. Chris Colfer began a wonderful series with this book and he threw so many valueable life lessons in there - gender equality (I was so angry when I read about how Brystal grew up) and the LGBTQ community... I loved this so much, I cannot even put it into words.
Profile Image for Chris.
394 reviews4 followers
November 17, 2020
Once I went on on of those vacations where the hotel was paid for, I just had to sit through a time share sales pitch. And the sales person started out by asking me what I wanted out of a vacation and what I was willing to pay and that kind of stuff. After a while I realized that what annoyed me so much about it was that they were trying to get me to do their job for them by telling them what they had to tell me or what cost they had to come in just under. Between that and a window buying experience, I've developed a distaste for salespeople in general. But, I digress.

That's what annoyed me about this book. There was an obvious moral to the story from the get go but the book just kept layering it on with out actually saying it.

And it was layered on thick. The whole book was dripping with how wonderful the protagonists are and how evil the opposition was. And every time they try something new, they're immediately perfect at it the first time they try. They just need to believe in themselves! (sarcasm)

And they never struggle for more than a sentence. But one pep talk later and they can pull whatever incredible magic they need out of the hat. i.e. just to show how wonderful the kids are. And the whole book is like that. Threat/difficult pops up, kids have a pep talk, kids do something random, threat is gone.

I know this is a children's book but that's not an excuse for being bad.
Profile Image for Lau_Marlau.
103 reviews106 followers
October 15, 2020
Absolutamente maravilloso ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Como ya había leído anteriormente al autor, sabía que iba a encontrarme con una historia extraordinaria, pero este libro ha superado todas mia expectativas 😍

Ha sido una novela magnífica que resalta valores tan importantes como la solidaridad, la amistad, la empatía o la compasión, entre muchos otros ❤️

Todos los personajes están perfectamente construidos y tienen una profundidad y desarrollo impresionante 🤩

Os lo recomiendo 100% y desde aquí hago un llamamiento para que se traduzcan todos los libros del autor al castellano 🙏

Próximamente reseña en: https://rincondemarlau.blogspot.com
Profile Image for Carey.
190 reviews17 followers
June 11, 2019
A Tale of Magic is the 1st book in a new series written by Chris Colfer. Even though it’s a prequel to his award winning Land of Stories series, readers do not need to be familiar with the characters in the first series.

Chris’s books are written with middle grade readers in mind; however, I think “children” of all ages will enjoy them and immediately feel love for the characters. I adored the protagonist Brystal; she’s spunky and determined to not take the path her parents have deemed necessary for girls. The other characters were tons of fun too. Readers will get to know a group of delightful fairies: Madame Weatherberry, Tangerina, Skylene, Xanthous, Emerelda, Lucy, and Mrs. Vee. You’ll also meet the evil monarchs and the Snow Queen witch. Their main goal is to stop magic from being practiced in the kingdoms.

Chris skillfully weaves in the need for acceptance and equality into his story. I recognized immediately some of the situations we face in today’s world, such as discrimination, division, patriarchy, oppression, and much more. Together the fairies attempt to rid the kingdoms of the evil mentioned above.

This fifty-something reader found herself laughing out loud at the situations the fairies and witches found themselves in during the story. All ages will love it! Thank you Chris, and Little, Brown, and Company for the ARC of this magical book.
Profile Image for Sandra Uv.
1,152 reviews276 followers
October 23, 2020
4/5

“Debemos compadecernos de la gente que decide odiar, Brystal. Sus vidas nunca serán tan significativas como aquellas que están llenas de amor. “

Un cuento de magia ha sido una historia preciosa llena de magia y aventuras. Tengo muchas ganas de saber que va a pasar con Brystal y sus amigos, el segundo libro promete mucho.


-Reseña completa: http://addicionaloslibros.blogspot.co...

Profile Image for Lucía Cafeína.
1,727 reviews193 followers
October 20, 2020
Mucho más mágico y enternecedor de lo que esperaba. Los anteriores libros de Chris Colfer fueron muy originales, pero desde luego que se ha notado una enorme evolución: una historia mucho más redonda, bien construida y con personajes maravillosos. Llena de valores y muy importante, a la vez que entretenida y llena de aventuras.
Profile Image for Ember.
149 reviews154 followers
February 19, 2021
After enjoying The Land of Stories books immensely through my teen years, I was looking forward to returning to Chris Colfer's magical universe but my expectations were quickly dashed by the snails-pace plot and lack of creativity within this book.

The synopsis of A Tale of Magic covers the first 350 pages out of this nearly 500 page book, and not much else of any consequence happens within those pages. It takes ages to get to the promised plot of the magic school and uncovering the mysteries of Madame Weatherberry.

The book also suffers from a severe case of telling, not showing. That coupled with the frequent instances of Brystal talking aloud to herself to explain her thoughts comes off as lazy and monotonous. Adding to that, it seems as though we get the backstories of each of our characters explained to us half a dozen times over as if we haven't already read the events happening in real time. The book's length could have been cut it half had it not been for the constant summarizing and repetition.

The liberal messages come off as preachy and distracting, as if this fantastical world was made to be nothing more than a giant metaphor for the women's suffrage movement and fighting homophobia simultaneously. That one's still confusing, trying to decipher when magic is a metaphor for which social justice issue.

Our antagonists are cartoonishly villainous with no depth to their characters whatsoever and only exist to emphasize how right and good our protagonist is.

The ending is anti-climactic and far too convenient, not to mention insanely rushed considering how little time was dedicated to actually resolving the main conflict which was only introduced to us a chapter before it is taken care of.
Profile Image for TJ.
988 reviews119 followers
October 6, 2019
The problem I have with most middle-grade books is most of the time the synopsis sounds amazing and I can't wait to read it but it's not long before i'm thinking "I'm too old for this shit"!!! With that said, that is never the case with Chris Colfer his stories draw me in and captivate me and I curse every single time I need to put them down. A Tale of Magic was such an exciting story with great characters and fun and touching moments a truly delightful read can't wait for the next!

Profile Image for pieceofmycolourfullife.
77 reviews39 followers
January 23, 2022
„Iɢɴᴏʀᴀɴᴄ�� ɪs ᴀ ᴄʜᴏɪᴄᴇ.
Hᴀᴛʀᴇᴅ ɪs ᴀ ᴄʜᴏɪᴄᴇ.
Vɪᴏʟᴇɴᴄᴇ ɪs ᴀ ᴄʜᴏɪᴄᴇ.
Bᴜᴛ sᴏᴍᴇᴏɴᴇ’s ᴇxɪsᴛᴇɴᴄᴇ ɪs
ɴᴇᴠᴇʀ ᴀ ᴄʜᴏɪᴄᴇ﹐ ᴏʀ ᴀ ғᴀᴜʟᴛ﹐
ᴀɴᴅ ɪᴛ‘s ᴄᴇʀᴛᴀɪɴʟʏ ɴᴏᴛ ᴀ ᴄʀɪᴍᴇ.
Yᴏᴜ ᴡᴏᴜʟᴅ ʙᴇ ᴡɪsᴇ ᴛᴏ ᴇᴅᴜᴄᴀᴛᴇ ʏᴏᴜʀsᴇʟғ.“
____________________________________________
Winx/Fate meets Harry Potter und lädt euch mit „Tale of Magic“ in eine magische und gleichermaßen gefährliche Welt ein. Wo lesen verboten ist und magische Wesen verhasst sind bis eine junge Fee sich 5 magisch begabten annimmt und sie ausbildet an einer geheimen Akademie damit sie das Königreich retten können wenn die Zeit gekommen ist.
Ich hab mich direkt in die von Chris Colfer erschaffene Welt verliebt mit all den magischen Wesen wie Einhörner, feen, Kobold, Zwerge und Hexen.
Zudem wird das Thema anders sein, diversity super schön behandelt. Als Beispiel ein magisch begabter junge wurde von seinen Eltern immer geschlagen weil er mit Puppen spielen wollte und da zeigt der Autor das es völlig okay ist so zu sein wie man eben sein
Mag.
Ich fand besonders die Fantasy Aspekte unheimlichen toll, denn die Akademie hat zum Beispiel Zimmer die sich an ihre Bewohner anpassen und die jungen magischen entwickeln sich so toll auch wenn sie sich erstmal aneinander gewöhnen müssen. ☺️
Und natürlich kommen Bücher hier auch nicht zu kurz denn sie sind verboten und dennoch werden welche gelesen werden. In dieser Reihe geht es auch wieder um Freundschaft , man selbst sein, andere akzeptieren und gemeinsam stark sein , alles ganz wichtige Botschaften wie ich finde!
Alles in allem kann ich euch den Auftakt dieser Reihe sehr empfehlen! Auch das Hörbuch ist toll denn es wird wieder von Rufus Beck gelesen.
Bin sooooo gespannt auf den zweiten Band denn die geheime Akademie kriegt da vermutlich ganz viel Zuwachs.
Bewertung: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ 5|5
Profile Image for Juan Manuel Sarmiento.
763 reviews145 followers
October 7, 2020
Se nota la maduración de Chris Colfer como autor con esta nueva entrega ambientada en el mismo universo de La tierra de las historias pero aun así independiente a dicha saga (al menos por ahora).
Una forma bastante amena de introducir temas como el racismo y la discriminación social con elementos de fantasía, magia, brujas y hadas en un contexto apto para lectores jóvenes y mayores.
Giros inesperados, humor, aventuras y capítulos que se leen solos. No puedo esperar a leer la segunda parte.
Profile Image for Suzanne.
590 reviews164 followers
November 23, 2021
Review by Torah 10 years old -

This is a book by Chris Colfer a star of Glee

It is the first in the tale of magic series.

This book was well written and interesting and had me wanting to turn the pages to find out what was happening.

The only thing I didnt like was it is a very big book 481 pages !!

If you like books with fantasy in it you will love any of his books.

Adults can even read these books.

The ending was fantastic.
Profile Image for Sophie Crane.
4,437 reviews166 followers
November 15, 2020
This book was super - interesting and full of magic and friendship. It is a very describing author who wrote this wonderful book. I would reccommand this for 10+.
Profile Image for Book2Dragon.
392 reviews158 followers
August 2, 2020
I was up until 2 A.M. finishing reading this. I love this author and his stories. Most of all I love how he weaves ethics and morality into them unobtrusively. By not coming out and saying it, he makes a point and maybe more people will get the message that way.
Not that this is a dry or religious book. It is a fantasy/fairy tale about--fairies. And witches, and kings, and politicians. There are unicorns and gryphons, magic carriages, castles, dwarves, ogres, elves, goblins and trolls. Beautiful jacket and illustrations, and even the hardback is beautiful.
If you've never read any of Chris Colfer books, what are you waiting for?
Profile Image for Fiebre Lectora.
2,037 reviews636 followers
November 5, 2020
me muero por que se publique ya la continuación de Un cuento de magia: ha sido una historia llena de fantasía, aventuras, y valores absolutamente necesarios en nuestra sociedad, que, además, de achucha el corazón y logra emocionarte.
Reseña completa: http://fiebrelectora.blogspot.com/202...
Profile Image for writtenbyshana.
60 reviews38 followers
November 28, 2021
من خیلی وقته تمومش کردم ولی اینجا اپدیت نکردم...
اندازه طلسم ارزو نبود ولی خیلی زیبا بود
با توجه به پایانش
به شدت احساس میکنم این گذشته دنیای قصه های همیشگیه
Profile Image for Mango.
261 reviews337 followers
May 5, 2021
Loved this book!

Many years ago a friend introduced me to The Land of Stories, and I was immediately hooked!

When the same friend told me about this book a few months ago, I immediately put it on my to-read list. However, I was unable to get the book until a couple days ago.

But when I got this from the library, I was worried I wouldn't find the sequel to The Land of Stories as interesting, since it had been years since I had read The Land of Stories.

Thank goodness I was wrong! I deeply enjoyed this book.

The book encouraged equality in a deep and moving story. Mad plot twists, great character growth, and a very creative world was created by the author.

And I loved the ending, it was so satisfying.

Excited to read the next book, A Tale of Witchcraft.

Thank you, friend. You know who you are. :)
Profile Image for Vorágine (ig:voragineblog).
682 reviews135 followers
August 2, 2021
4,5.

En resumen, Un cuento de magia ha sido una lectura que ha tenido todo lo que necesito en un middle grade, desde un gran mundo mágico, pasando por una trama adictiva y fácil de leer, hasta personajes de los que nos quedamos con ganas de saber más, por lo que tengo claro que seguiré leyendo esta serie.

Reseña completa
Profile Image for Michelle.
529 reviews1 follower
November 3, 2019
A Tale of Magic was an interesting story, and it was fun to read, but so much of the book felt like thinly veiled efforts to convey a stance on social issues. But instead of letting the symbolism speak for itself, or letting the reader make inferences from the story, Colfer essentially beats the reader over the head with his message, which just made much of the book feel tiring at times.
Profile Image for Disney_World.
35 reviews
October 3, 2020
Okay... I LOVED THIS BOOK! It was amazing!!! A great book to give us some more information about before the whole Alex, Connor thing. Would definitely recommend reading this after Land of Stories!
December 11, 2019
This book felt so much different from the Land of Stories series for me. The story took a while to develop and then came to a very quick and clean conclusion. A little too clean for all the long build up. It also felt very preachy and clearly has an underlying meaning that many young readers will not pick up on. I was disappointed for as much as I LOVED the first series, this one felt forced to me. I will continue the series and see if it improves.
1 review
May 23, 2020
I really enjoyed the land of stories so when I saw the there was a prequel I was excited. I tried to read this book but the story is really slow and takes a long time to get to the point. The story was boring and slow.
Profile Image for Rebecca.
1,594 reviews17 followers
April 17, 2020
Chris Colfer has done it again!! I loved this book so much!! Can’t wait to read the next book! I love the world of Land of Stories so much! Highly recommend!
Displaying 1 - 30 of 1,871 reviews

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