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gorelenore 's review for:
Amethyst: Princess of Gemworld
by Shannon Hale, Dean Hale
This was cute a fun read! It was a lovely and entertaining middle grade graphic novel about a magical girl who is a troublemaker. She gets banished to Earth to understand her life without magic but in the process she and her chaperone get stuck and forget all about their homeland.
This was such an imaginative tale and a wonderful hero tale. Amaya must learn respect, patience, coping, apprecitation and adaptability. She is headstrong in the beginning but as she lives on Earth she learns a lot about who she can be without magic and is able to really enjoy herself there. When she is pulled back into her world, Gemworld, she must re-identify with her magical self in order to save her home and her family.
This was an adventure for sure between Amaya getting in trouble and being banished, to her re-learning about Gemworld. She was thrust into situations that the weak of heart and character might not have been able to cope with. She is strong and couragous and this story is so much fun. I didn't really like Amaya, as was probably the point, but she really came into herself in this book os self-discovery and growth.
This book would be great for recluctant readers, and for family lessons in respect and coping.
This was such an imaginative tale and a wonderful hero tale. Amaya must learn respect, patience, coping, apprecitation and adaptability. She is headstrong in the beginning but as she lives on Earth she learns a lot about who she can be without magic and is able to really enjoy herself there. When she is pulled back into her world, Gemworld, she must re-identify with her magical self in order to save her home and her family.
This was an adventure for sure between Amaya getting in trouble and being banished, to her re-learning about Gemworld. She was thrust into situations that the weak of heart and character might not have been able to cope with. She is strong and couragous and this story is so much fun. I didn't really like Amaya, as was probably the point, but she really came into herself in this book os self-discovery and growth.
This book would be great for recluctant readers, and for family lessons in respect and coping.