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Falcon Quinn and the Crimson Vapor

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Falcon Quinn survived the first term at the Academy for Monsters along with his monstrous friends Max, Pearl, Mortia, and the rest. He has finally discovered his monster nature and is working hard to embrace it. But what does it mean to be an Angel, exactly? Having wings is great, when Falcon can remember to use them, but with parents who are the leaders of two warring groups—the monsters and the guardians—Falcon still feels torn in half.

When his monster friends begin to doubt his loyalty to the monster world and his only option is flight to Guardian Island, where his mother rules and he is a prince, he'll see the guardians as well as his monster friends in a whole new light. He will also have to decide if Jonny Frankenstein can be trusted and find a way to save his friend Megan from her imprisonment on Guardian Island, not to mention find a way to stop the monsters and guardians from fighting, once and for all.

Bestselling author Jennifer Finney Boylan continues the heroic and often hilarious tale of Falcon Quinn and his band of monster friends in this second installment of the hair-raising and sidesplitting adventure of monstrous proportions.

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    • Kirkus

      April 15, 2011

      Falcon Quinn returns to another exclamation mark–laden year at a school where nobody understands him, the poor little angel—literally. 

      At the end of his last year at the Monster Academy, Falcon discovered his angelic nature as well as his true parentage: His father is the demonic Academy headmaster Crow; his mother, queen of the monster-killing guardians. None of this knowledge has made him any more popular. The other kids don't trust him anyway, and it doesn't help that he keeps finding himself in ridiculous scrapes. Did Falcon try to kill his friend Pearl, the famous Chupakabra of Peru? Did he stuff Quagmire, the puddle of bubbling glop, in his godzooka during band practice? When Falcon flees from monsters and finds himself among guardians, he discovers those monster-killers resemble his monster friends more closely than either side would like to admit. The silliness is consistently funny but not consistently age-appropriate; a pirate referring to the bottom of the sea as "Peter Tork's locker" is a groaner that will zoom right over the heads of middle-school readers. For the most part, however, egg-laying werechicken boys and Hamlet "as written in the original Frankenstein dialect" will keep giggles coming. The humor provides necessary counterpoint to the trowelled-on nobody-loves-me angst.

      Goofy, overenthusiastic nonsense with just enough rambling plot to hold it all together. (Fantasy. 9-11)

      (COPYRIGHT (2011) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

    • School Library Journal

      August 1, 2011

      Gr 5-8-It's a new year for Falcon Quinn but things haven't changed much. Sure, he's an angel now, but being the only angel anyone can remember isn't that great when all you're trying to do is find where you fit in. Couple that with the fact that most everyone-monsters and guardians alike-thinks he is a traitor and it looks like another lonely year for him. In this sequel to Falcon Quinn and the Black Mirror (HarperCollins, 2010), readers are introduced to several new characters, some good, some bad, and some who are exactly the same as already existing characters. The new arrivals are interesting for the most part, but only add to an already convoluted population of peripheral people. The story, while mostly enjoyable, is occasionally uneven, especially when characterizations are contrived more to fit the action than the established personality. And while there are some interesting plot twists, Falcon spends most of the story pondering his loneliness or the importance of being true to oneself. That said, Crimson Vapor is a quick, high-energy read that should be met with some enthusiasm by fans of the first book.-Erick Knapp, Davis Library, Plano, TX

      Copyright 2011 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      May 15, 2011
      Grades 5-8 In Falcon Quinn and the Black Mirror (2010), Falcon, an angel, learned that he is the son of a monster and the queen of the monster-hunting Guardians. Deciding to live as neither a Guardian nor a monster, Falcon tries to enjoy a trip to the Monster Island amusement park and then a new year at the Academy of Monsters. However, suspicions swirl about the spring disappearance of two of Falcons friends, and Falcon vows to find them, solve the mystery of a vapor-emitting amulet, and discover where he belongs. Newcomers may be lost, but series fans will enjoy this installment.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2011, American Library Association.)

    • The Horn Book

      July 1, 2011
      Learning he's an angel hasn't made kindhearted Falcon any less of an outsider, whether he's at his father's Academy for Monsters or on his mother's island of monster-slaying Guardians. Can he stop his friends from destroying one another? Monstrous silliness abounds in Boylan's slapdash second Falcon Quinn adventure; the lively (if sprawling) supporting cast of zany characters counterpoint Falcon's existential blues.

      (Copyright 2011 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • Kirkus

      April 15, 2011

      Falcon Quinn returns to another exclamation mark-laden year at a school where nobody understands him, the poor little angel--literally.

      At the end of his last year at the Monster Academy, Falcon discovered his angelic nature as well as his true parentage: His father is the demonic Academy headmaster Crow; his mother, queen of the monster-killing guardians. None of this knowledge has made him any more popular. The other kids don't trust him anyway, and it doesn't help that he keeps finding himself in ridiculous scrapes. Did Falcon try to kill his friend Pearl, the famous Chupakabra of Peru? Did he stuff Quagmire, the puddle of bubbling glop, in his godzooka during band practice? When Falcon flees from monsters and finds himself among guardians, he discovers those monster-killers resemble his monster friends more closely than either side would like to admit. The silliness is consistently funny but not consistently age-appropriate; a pirate referring to the bottom of the sea as "Peter Tork's locker" is a groaner that will zoom right over the heads of middle-school readers. For the most part, however, egg-laying werechicken boys and Hamlet "as written in the original Frankenstein dialect" will keep giggles coming. The humor provides necessary counterpoint to the trowelled-on nobody-loves-me angst.

      Goofy, overenthusiastic nonsense with just enough rambling plot to hold it all together. (Fantasy. 9-11)

      (COPYRIGHT (2011) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

Formats

  • Kindle Book
  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:4.3
  • Lexile® Measure:610
  • Interest Level:4-8(MG)
  • Text Difficulty:2-3

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