The Faceless Fiend review by LSpro
The Faceless Fiend: Being the Tale of a Criminal Mastermind, His Masked Minions and a Princess with a Butter Knife, Involving Explosives and a Certain ... Misadventures of Emmaline and Rubberbones)
by Bill Slavin, Howard Whitehouse
Age Range - 12 and up
Genre - Fiction
Five Star Award

LitPick Review

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Age at time of review - 13
Reviewer's Location - Mahomet, IL , United States
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Emmaline Cayley... Aviation extraodinaire... Robert Burns... Errand Boy... Princess Purnah... Porok! Glekk!. Three young children, one evil kidnapper, and a suspenseful adventure in London- all woven together into one insane story called The Faceless Fiend. It starts off in a pretty conspicuous setting, in mad Mrs. Butterworth's cottage, with the three children attempting a flight experiment shortly followed by their teacher, Bellbuckle's lecture on why humans can't fly like birds and the first impressions of the three children's personalities. Emmaline; calm and scientific, is a careful and calculating character. Purnah, shown as a bit of a nutcase to the people of England (although she's mild compared to the people of her Chiligriti homeland), and Robert; enthusiastic, and not easily hurt, one of the only two fans of Mrs. Butterworth's slug cake. (Stanley, the little brown dog, was the other fan.) And all seems well. However, when a series of mysterious events regarding Princess Purnah and Chiligrit arise, everyone's suspicious- and for good reason. Robert, dressed as Purnah, is kidnapped by the henchmen of the infamous Faceless Fiend. Purnah, trying to escape, finds herself lost in a forest, only to be found by Emmaline, off a newly twisted ankle and bearing chocolate, to Purnah's salivation... and salivation. Although riding on separate carriages, all three find themselves in London, and after Robert's half-baked escape, he runs into a boy of the London streets, Peachey, who inadvertently leads him to Banjo, a dog nearing senility, the newest main character. But in attempting to save Purnah and her country, and Robert from the Fiend's irritation with him, can they possibly defeat a criminal mastermind?

Opinion: 

I adored The Faceless Fiend. It's charming, funny, and the characters were the most amusing people in the world. Even serious Emmaline had her moments. I hadn't read any other books in the series, but this one stands alone wonderfully, with all the little details of previous books inserted into the text, so the reader wasn't confused. Although I was an avid Purnah fan throughout the book, Robert was a close second- both of them, especially in the same place at the same time, created a hilarious duo. Emmaline, though, had a surprisingly small part in the book, considering the series name (The Mad Misadventures of Emmaline and Rubberbone), and I do think she could have been a bit more prominent. Faceless Fiend is, just a little, childish in writing style- something I would have appreciated several worlds more when I was seven or eight, but for those older adolescents, even adults who are still fans of Dr. Seuss, I'd definitely recommend this.

 

Rating:
5
Content Rating:

Content rating - nothing offensive
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