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Between Two Ends | LitPick Book Reviews
Between Two Ends
Between Two Ends
Between Two Ends
David Ward
When Yeats and his parents visit his grandmother's creepy old house, Yeats reunites a pair of pirate bookends and uncovers the amazing truth: Years ago, Yeats's father traveled into The Arabian Nights with a friend, and the friend, Shari, is still stuck in the tales. Assisted by the not-always-trustworthy pirates, Yeats must navigate the unfamiliar world of the story of Shaharazad--dodging guards and tigers and the dangerous things that lurk in the margins of the stories--in order to save Shari and bring peace to his family. David Ward has created a fantasy rich with atmosphere and full of heart-stopping drama.Praise for Between Two Ends“A book about a book within a book. Ward presents just enough of an outline of the traditional Arabian Nights frame story to set the stage for modern readers, while creating his own fantasy within the fantasy to grab their attention.” –Kirkus Reviews“A satisfying chapterbook fantasy.” –Booklist“Both the fantastical and the real settings are well developed. The gruff and amusing bookend pirates are the perfect mix of heroism and pragmatism to complement Yeats.” –The Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books

Book Details

Genre: 

  • Fantasy

Age Level: 

  • 12 and up
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Between Two Ends, by David Ward, is a good book because it's about magical books. Yeats, the main character, is a 12 year- old boy with a depressed father and a scared mother. He and his parents are visiting his Grandma's house. He wants to find out why his dad is so depressed, so he asks his grandma. She tells him that 20 years ago, a girl named Shari, disappeared in the library. Exploring the library, Yeats finds magical bookends that can transport him into any book. The living bookends also tell him about a girl they transported into the book 1001 Arabian Nights 20 years ago.

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