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Book Review

Publisher's Note:

In the city of Hodorf, the Tattercoats live by a strict code. Only steal what you need, don't leave a trace of yourself behind, and if another Tattercoat is in trouble, you must always help them out. These are the rules that guide Nim's life as she and her rat, Nibbles, live on the streets and the rooftops of the only place she's ever called home. So when a new boy named Otto comes to town and gets caught up in the devious plottings of a former Tattercoat who's fallen from grace, Nim takes it upon herself to come to Otto's rescue. But Otto isn't the only one who needs help: The days in Hodorf have been growing progressively shorter and darker since the legendary sundragons went extinct. The air is getting colder, hope is waning, and it won't be long until the freeze grows so bone-deep that the chimneys the Tattercoats use for warmth at night will no longer suffice. With things growing more dire, Nim sets off into the murky woods surrounding the city, searching for Otto--and for answers.…

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Overall Book Review:

Being homeless is a way of life for the Tattercoats but it’s horribly new to Otto.  The Tattercoats have an impressive family code of taking care of each other, and they take Otto in when he’s at his lowest.  Becoming the friends he needs, they teach him to survive.  As Otto faces challenges, he has a steep learning curve.  Forced to decide where his ethics start and stop, he also learns a lot about family, industry, and watching out for each other.  The book is somewhat of an introduction to horror for kids and things go wrong for the main character at every step of the way.   

The author did an impressive job painting a realistic world.  In the theater of my mind I could see the land these kids strive to survive in, feel the cold that constantly engulfs them, and feel the anxiety as they try to outsmart the bad guys on many occasions.  The characters are engaging and charismatic.  With magical creatures, trolls, and talking animals, this book is quirky yet whimsical.  From cover to cover, the story kept my attention.  It’s captivating and easy to keep wanting more just to find out what happens to Otto and does he ever find his beloved mother?  Often intense and emotionally difficult, it can be a bit of a nail biter.  If you’re a fan of Grimm’s Fairy Tales, not the Hollywood versions but the original ones, this might be the book for you.  With many twists and turns throughout the story, it’s truly the characters that make this story hard to put down.   

This is Matilda Woods’ fourth book.  She often writes with an imaginative combination of real life and a touch of fairy tale essence.

Review of an Advance Reading Copy

This book was sent to Compass Book Ratings for review by Philomel


Content Analysis:

Profanity/Language: None 

Violence/Gore:  Implied some small animals froze to death and died; a man and a woman are found frozen to death with a small child between them who is still alive; mention that a father died previously; a woman disappears later found to be kidnapped and held by magic; a young boy is forced to live on the street and his jacket is stolen; people spray water on children to make them go away (in a winter atmosphere); a girl is dragged away and forced into a basement, no physical or sexual harm committed; several young children are held prisoner and forced to work, sparse food and living conditions; mention of a girl’s mother and father having frozen to death; a child is taken to a place as punishment where rats might eat him; a woman wants to abduct more children and make them work for her; three people die from the cold; 2 older teen boys try to abbuct a girl but she fights them off with help from a friend; 2 older teen boys adbuct 2 other kids and take them to work for their mother; a boy describes in detail what it was like when his best friend froze to death, somewhat descriptive; a woman threatens to turn 2 kids into animals and to eat them; a woman confines 2 kids in a cage; 8 men were previously turned into wolves, one was chopped up with an axe and eaten, mild description but not bloody; a man tells a story of a giant who was stabbed to death, not descriptive; a man captures things and people by magic; a dragon-napping by magic, it’s kept in a basement for years; 2 kids capture an evil woman and her 2 sons by magic and keep them hostage. 

Sex/Nudity:  None

Mature Subject Matter:

Death of parents (multiple times), socioeconomic disparities, hungry kids living on the streets, children & adults freeze to death, adults turn a blind eye to homeless children, homelessness, kidnapping, animal-napping, children held captive and forced to work, parents gave away children because of economic hardship, abduction, robbery & thieving. 

Alcohol / Drug Use:

None

Overall Book Rating
Profanity/Language
Rating:
0
10
Violence/Gore
Rating:
3
10
Sex/Nudity
Rating:
0
10

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About the Reviewer

Reading a good adventure story has always been a vacation in the theater of my mind. When I’m stressed or just need to get away for a few minutes, I love the opportunity to climb into somebody else’s world. I didn’t enjoy reading until I was in the Air Force and building bombs in Korea; it was a wonderful distraction from the real world. (I tried bull riding, but it wasn’t exciting enough.)