ashe_nightwind's review against another edition
5.0
Picked it up because it reminded me of Harry Potter. Finished the series because it was its own story and a very good one at that.
mattbeatty's review against another edition
4.0
This series has been so fun to listen to with the kids. I love Jenny Nimmo.
librarylisa614's review against another edition
4.0
Well, I had a fully-thought-through review, but Goodreads didn't save it. This one will be less eloquent :).
I enjoyed the final book of the Charlie Bone series. I felt that it summed up the other books nicely, finishing all of the storylines in a satisfactory way. Although there are an excessive number of similarities between Charlie Bone and Harry Potter series (seriously, there was no need for Charlie to have unruly hair also! or to have a best friend who has a big loud family of red heads!!!), I do feel that there is a small unique demographic for this series. Here are some things in it's favor:
1) All of the books in the Children of the Red King series are written at approximately the same level. If a student is ready to start the series, they can go straight through them. They are all a similar length and intensity (although, it does build slightly to the final book).
2) Charlie Bone is written to a more innocent audience. There is no cursing at any point in the series. The most romantic thing to happen is handholding between some of the supporting characters. The entire storyline, all 8 books, takes place in less than three years, so the content doesn't need to age with the characters. Even the violence is fairly innocent considering it is an epic battle between good and evil :) None of the "good guys" die, but (spoiler alert) there are a few deaths among the bad guys. Oddly, most of them were dead already, but time travelling into the future, so it didn't seem so morbid.
3) The final advantage I see for Charlie Bone's audience is that Charlie does not have the "me-against-the-world" life that Harry has. He is independent, impulsive, and often starts his journeys alone, but always ends up with backup, whether it's older friends, family members (even though some of them are evil), or at least his neighbor's dog :). I like that he has a loving support system but is still able to be an independent character.
In short, I think that Charlie Bone is able to reach a slightly younger demographic of strong readers who may not be emotionally ready for the content of the later Harry Potter books. I liked the series and I thought it stood on it's own well (after I got over the ridiculous number of similarities).
I enjoyed the final book of the Charlie Bone series. I felt that it summed up the other books nicely, finishing all of the storylines in a satisfactory way. Although there are an excessive number of similarities between Charlie Bone and Harry Potter series (seriously, there was no need for Charlie to have unruly hair also! or to have a best friend who has a big loud family of red heads!!!), I do feel that there is a small unique demographic for this series. Here are some things in it's favor:
1) All of the books in the Children of the Red King series are written at approximately the same level. If a student is ready to start the series, they can go straight through them. They are all a similar length and intensity (although, it does build slightly to the final book).
2) Charlie Bone is written to a more innocent audience. There is no cursing at any point in the series. The most romantic thing to happen is handholding between some of the supporting characters. The entire storyline, all 8 books, takes place in less than three years, so the content doesn't need to age with the characters. Even the violence is fairly innocent considering it is an epic battle between good and evil :) None of the "good guys" die, but (spoiler alert) there are a few deaths among the bad guys. Oddly, most of them were dead already, but time travelling into the future, so it didn't seem so morbid.
3) The final advantage I see for Charlie Bone's audience is that Charlie does not have the "me-against-the-world" life that Harry has. He is independent, impulsive, and often starts his journeys alone, but always ends up with backup, whether it's older friends, family members (even though some of them are evil), or at least his neighbor's dog :). I like that he has a loving support system but is still able to be an independent character.
In short, I think that Charlie Bone is able to reach a slightly younger demographic of strong readers who may not be emotionally ready for the content of the later Harry Potter books. I liked the series and I thought it stood on it's own well (after I got over the ridiculous number of similarities).
smiley7245's review against another edition
adventurous
emotional
mysterious
tense
medium-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? A mix
- Strong character development? It's complicated
- Loveable characters? It's complicated
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated
3.0
shaekin's review against another edition
3.0
I was torn between giving this book a 2 or a 3. I ended up with a three because there were elements that were actually a surprise to me. There were definitely still elements that were horrible. For instance when Charlie forgets to lock a door behind him when he knows that there are people searching for that very door right behind him. No kid is that dumb.
toastii's review against another edition
4.0
I was really happy with how it ended. Pretty much what I expected, but I'm happy about that.
roshk99's review against another edition
3.0
Good ending for the series, the battle at the end was relatively fast-paced and the cheesy good-triumphs-over-evil ending provides closure.