Bloom

by Doreen Cronin (Author) David Small (Illustrator)

Reading Level: 2nd − 3rd Grade

From #1 New York Times bestselling author Doreen Cronin and Caldecott Medal-winning illustrator David Small comes a picture book about how an extraordinary "ordinary" girl can save a kingdom with the help of a mud fairy.

A glass kingdom is no place for a Mud Fairy. Bloom and her mud fairy magic might be able to turn weeds into flowers and spin sand into glass, but the people of the kingdom ceaselessly complain about the trails of dirt and puddles of mud that seem to follow her every step, and finally they cast her out. But when the glass castle begins to crack, then cracks some more, the King and Queen in a panic search for the long-banished fairy, but they can't find Bloom anywhere. Desperate to save their home, they send their meekest, most ordinary subject, a girl named Genevieve whose sole task until now has been to polish the Queen's crystal sugar spoon--to coax any worthy fairy to come and save the kingdom. Genevieve finds Bloom exactly where the king and queen failed to see her, and Bloom knows exactly how to save the kingdom. But it will take the two girls working together, along with a mighty dollop of self-confidence--and some very messy hands--to accomplish the extraordinary.

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Kirkus Reviews

If youngsters scratch their heads, take them to the yard or community garden to plant and make mud pies.

Booklist

Both Cronin and Small are award winners, and their team-up for this title should double its appeal.

Publishers Weekly

Starred Review

This smart, subversive fairy tale is set in a kingdom whose palace is made entirely of glass and whose inhabitants scorn dirt and untidiness. The kingdom was once home to a red-haired fairy named Bloom, whose magic could "spin sand into glass, turn weeds into blossoms, and grow a trickle of rainwater into a racing river." But Bloom's heavy steps and muddy footprints drew complaints, and she retired, exasperated, to the forest. Now, the king's beautiful glass castle leaks, and everything else is "held together by tape, glue, and peasants." Small's (Glamourpuss) witty ink-and-wash drawings follow the king and queen as they enter the forest to search for the powerful fairy, but they refuse to believe that Bloom and the bucket of mud she proffers is the creature they seek. They dispatch their sweet servant girl Genevieve to locate her instead. Bloom questions Genevieve closely: "Why would the king and queen send a delicate child... to do something they could not?" she asks. "Because I am ordinary," Genevieve confesses. Outraged that any girl would value herself so lightly, Bloom immediately begins Genevieve's training in "magic"--up to their elbows in mud, the two make bricks and build a house. When Genevieve returns to the kingdom armed with new knowledge and spattered with mud, she thunders, "I am here!" Cronin (the Click, Clack, Moo books) juggles thematic elements with grace, mixing fairy-tale parody with maker tale and girl-power story to celebrate mess, chaos, and big plans. When seen up close, Cronin suggests, fairy-tale "magic" might really be no more than the willingness to get one's hands dirty. Ages 4-8. Agent: Holly McGhee, Pippin Properties. (Feb.)

Copyright 2015 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission.

School Library Journal

Starred Review

K-Gr 3--Though her outward appearance is chock-full of dirt, the fairy Bloom is delightfully talented. Underappreciated and misunderstood, she retreats into the wilderness. Without Bloom's magical touch, her kingdom falls into disarray, "held together by duct tape, glue, and peasants." Though the king and then the queen search for answers to fix their kingdom ("I am looking for a magical creature, gone so many years ago"), they are too haughty to understand the sprite's message when she places mud at their feet. A seemingly ordinary girl named Genevieve, whose only job in the kingdom is to carry the queen's delicate, unbreakable spoon, is next sent in their stead. Though initially puzzled by Bloom's mannerisms, Genevieve learns from the fairy and develops the skills she needs to rebuild her kingdom Bloom's inspiring outlook ("Tell them there is no such thing as an ordinary girl") paves the way for Genevieve to return home. Humor is laced throughout the charming narrative, highlighted through Genevieve's dramatic growth and the expressive ink and watercolor illustrations. Wavy, thin lines accentuate the ebb and flow of Bloom's magical world. Changing typography emphasizes key ideas and natural pauses within the story line. VERDICT This engaging, empowering tale proves the future of happily ever after is in one own's hands, regardless of how much dirt they may have on them.--Meg Smith, Cumberland County Public Library, Fayetteville, NC

Copyright 2016 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

Review quotes



Classification
Fiction
ISBN-13
9781442406209
Lexile Measure
720
Guided Reading Level
-
Publisher
Atheneum Books
Publication date
February 20, 2016
Series
-
BISAC categories
JUV012030 - Juvenile Fiction | Fairy Tales & Folklore | General
JUV034000 - Juvenile Fiction | Royalty (kings queens princes princesses knights etc.)
JUV029010 - Juvenile Fiction | Nature & the Natural World | Environment
Library of Congress categories
Magic
Fairy tales
Fairies
Kings, queens, rulers, etc
Cooperativeness
Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books, 04/01/16
School Library Connection, 05/01/16

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