Reviews

The Dark of Deep Below by Nate Taylor, Patrick Rothfuss

snowbenton's review

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5.0

This perfect and devious little book is full of comical expressions, dreadful siblings, and adventure.

theybedax's review

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5.0

The thing about siblings is that only you can treat them badly. Nothing bonds you better then outside sources. This series is objectively the best series to raise your children on. Teach them to face their fears, especially the valid ones.

jlennidorner's review

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5.0

Exactly what having a younger sibling is like! Ha ha.
Ending one is just so... oh my, as George Takei would say. Those of us with a dark humor streak will want to run right out and read this to the younger sibling. Evil. Grounding! Okay, it'd be a bad idea.
But it's okay, it goes back to where you figured. And then, page 76, ... well, you really should read the first book before reading this second book. Otherwise you'll miss the hilarious moment, or at least not understand it as well as you might have.
Suspense! Heart pounding suspense! By the second ending I was deeply grateful that the book still had more pages. Talk about a cliffhanger.
I LOVED the next part. If I wasn't already shipping this author, I assure you, I'd have signed up for the fandom right then and there.
The final pages give a serious case of the "awws."
A fantastic book. Difficult to get a copy, but completely worth the effort.

treeburner's review

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5.0

Is it strange that a book written in this style actually scared me?

samwescott's review

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5.0

I actually think this one was a big improvement on the first Princess and Mr. Whiffle book. I loved the glimpses of the parents and the whole Goblin scenario. The Mr-Whiffle-as-Scout gag actually made me laugh. It took the interesting mood of the first book and glossed it over a more substantial plot. Highly recommend for creepy children or adults who like picture books.

rachieg's review

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4.0

Surprisingly heartwarming.

vaderbird's review

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3.0

5 star - Perfect
4 star - i would recommend
3 star - good
2 star - struggled to complete
1 star - could not finish

femto's review

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3.0

Con esto puedo decir que he leido todo lo de Rothfuss, lo cual solo es algo que me produce satisfaccion propia, no gane nada, pero aun asi, lo hice :D

Sobre el libro, lo usare en un futuro y se lo leere a mi bastardo si llego a tener uno, para empezar a corromperle la mente de a poco.

verkisto's review

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3.0

The Thing Beneath the Bed was a great fairy tale turned on its head, switching the roles of the protagonist and the antagonist, and making the thing beneath the bed the least of your concerns. It managed to tell a traditional fairy tale, with each ending giving you a little bit more of the story, and with each ending making it more and more disturbing. It worked remarkably well, partly because it went places you didn't expect (though if you go back and look more closely at the illustrations, you'll find a handful of clues), enough so that I wondered if a sequel would work at all. We already know that the Princess is the real danger; what could mix us up this time around?

The answer is a baby brother. The Princess doesn't really like him, but like Labyrinth, when the goblins come to take him away, big sister winds up going to look for him. This time around, the story plays with us by using the Princess' menace as part of the story. We know there's an underlying vein of violence within her, and the authors use that to their advantage. The thing is, the story never really reaches a point where we're taken by surprise like we were in the first book.

The book maintains the structure of having multiple endings, each one setting a different mood (though, this time around, instead of going from happy to dark, we go from dark to happy), but the big reveal/surprise didn't pack as much of a punch. Part of that is because I didn't see any hints that suggested something like that would happen, but another part of it is that it makes the Princess a bit more sympathetic. And she shouldn't be. Not after the way the first book ended.

The book was cute, sidestepping the scenes of the Princess' violence to show the aftermath (which isn't to say that it wasn't still disturbing), and like the first book, the artwork matched the story perfectly. I just hope that Rothfuss and Taylor decide against telling any more stories involving the Princess. Once you get past the final ending of the first book, you really have all the story you need.

the_book_nat's review

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5.0

Genius!!!! I loved how there was more than one ending and the illustrations are incredible. This is one story that I could read over and over. It's the perfect story to read aloud!