School Library Journal Review
Gr 3-5-In this promising series opener, nine-year-old Pip has the unique ability to communicate with magical creatures-but no one believes her. After the "Unicorn Incident" ruins Career Day at her Atlanta elementary school, Pip is sent to small-town Cloverton to stay with her aunt. Aunt Emma is a veterinarian to magical creatures, and even though she doesn't believe in Pip's ability either, she is willing to let Pip help out around the clinic-especially when an invasion of fireball Fuzzles threatens the town. With the help of her cousin Callie (a fan of musicals) and her new friend Tomas (who is allergic to everything), Pip must use her knowledge and imagination to save the town from fire and the Fuzzles from extermination. VERDICT Fast-paced and sprinkled with diagrams of magical creatures and whimsical details (like Tomas's tendency to exhibit allergic reactions such as hiccuping colorful bubbles or floating), this younger middle-grade offering from Pearce and Stiefvater will please fantasy and animal story fans alike.-Laurie Slagenwhite Walters, Brighton District Library, Brighton, MI © Copyright 2015. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Publisher's Weekly Review
After nine-year-old Pip Bartlett inadvertently instigates a unicorn stampede, she is sent to spend the summer in Georgia with her Aunt Emma, a dedicated vet for magical creatures. Morris provides the lively and jubilant voice of Pip-the perfect tone for the story, which is told from Pip's first-person perspective. She also provides a variety of voices for a rich cast of secondary characters-both human and magical-which adds to the story's enjoyment. Reader McGowan steps in to narrate the excerpts from Pip's favorite book, Jeffrey Higgleston's Guide to Magical Creatures, which are scattered throughout the story. He provides a prim and proper delivery in tune with the encyclopedic tone of the fictional guide; the result is an amusing contrast to the main story. Ages 8-12. A Scholastic Press hardcover. (Apr.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Horn Book Review
Griffins and HobGrackles and Grims, oh my! In Pearce and Stiefvaters alternate universe, Jeffrey Higglestons Guide is the trusted authority on magical creatures, and as an aspiring researcher, nine-year-old Pip Bartlett keeps her copy close (adding information-rich doodles as her own knowledge grows). Pip can speak to the creatures, but nobody believes her. After a unicorn mishap at school, shes sent away for the summer, where she helps her aunt run the familys veterinary clinic. When the town is infested with Fuzzles (combustible dustlike creatures that live in underwear drawers), the Supernatural/Magical Animal Care, Keeping, and Education Department (S.M.A.C.K.E.D. for short) wants them exterminated. Together with her show tunesobsessed cousin; her new best friend Tomas, an allergy-prone boy who hiccups colored bubbles; and a scaredy-cat unicorn, Pip discovers the source of the Fuzzle problem and a solution to boot. Loaded with kid-friendly similes (hair stuck up like hed rubbed it against a balloon), the fast-paced prose is lively, witty, and gripping. Pages of Jeffrey Higglestons Guide with Pips improving notations are scattered throughout the text, and Stiefvaters black-and-white textured illustrations (often, satirically, featuring cuddly, big-eyed creatures) support world-building and character-building alike. The satisfying ending leaves just enough unresolved so readers will anticipate a sequel. An accessible fantasy for independent readers not yet ready for Rowling. elisa gall (c) Copyright 2015. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Kirkus Review
Magical animals abound in Pip's world, and she loves them allespecially since she can talk to them.Not that anyone believes her, because everyone knows that magical animals can't talk. But her unique ability comes in superhandy when the Georgia town where her aunt Emma runs a veterinary clinic for the local HobGrackles, Unicorns and like extranatural fauna is threatened by an outbreak of Fuzzlesrecognizable to Star Trek fans as similar to the adorable and fertile "tribbles" but with the added tendency to burst into flames when startled. Pearce and Stiefvater pass up no chance to exploit the comedic possibilities, keeping the level of actual danger to a minimum and stuffing the supporting cast with new and traditional mythical creatures of diverse temperament (most memorably a hysterically skittish Unicorn: "Why! Why is the sky so blue today? What does it mean?"). The authors pitch doughty Pip into a nonstop set of crises as she contrives to save the town and persuade the Fuzzles to vanish. Having publicly expressed an intention to depict mythological creatures cuter than baby seals for this outing, Stiefvater outdoes herself in the illustrations with portraits of hopelessly cuddly Griffins, Grims and other generally fearsome monsters sporting big, winsome eyes. Stay tuned for more hilarious ructions. It's a distinct change of pace for two authors better known for intensely romantic teen fantasies, but they carry it off with aplomb. (Fantasy. 8-11) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
Nine-year-old Pip Bartlett is crazy about animals, particularly of the magical variety, and she can't wait to spend the summer with her aunt, a magical-animal vet. When Pip arrives at the clinic, however, life soon turns chaotic: the town is infested with combustible pests (fuzzles), and a ruthless government inspector keeps threatening her aunt. Pip teams up with the neighbor boy and an anxious unicorn named Regent Maximus to save the town from a fiery end and to save the fuzzles from an untimely death. Pearce and Stiefvater perk up the real world considerably with the addition of miniature silky griffins, Pegasi, and lilac-horned Pomeranians to an otherwise realistic setting. Illustrated pages from Pip's beloved Jeffrey Higgleston's Guide to Magical Creatures are included, offering magical animal stats with ample annotations made by Pip. Through conversations with Pip yes, she can talk to the animals these creatures prove themselves to be memorable characters in their own rights. Lighthearted and funny, this slim book will delight readers who prefer their stories with a fantastic flair. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Pearce, author of the popular Retold Fairytales series, joins acclaimed fantasy pro Stiefvater (Shiver Trilogy and Raven Cycle), to enchant a new, younger audience. Name recognition alone will drive demand.--Smith, Julia Copyright 2015 Booklist