A charming fantasy about a boy whose eccentric grandfather turns out to be a wizard. When Sam’s grandfather gets accidentally sucked into another dimension, he turns to his cousin Sarah for help. Not because she knows anything about magic—her ambition is to become the first woman locomotive driver—but because she’s the most practical and determined person he knows.

She was afraid of only three things in the world: firstly, that many other girls would beat her to it, and secondly, that when she was grown up there wouldn’t be any more railroads, and lastly, of spiders.

Sarah scorns Sam’s protests that he has no magic talent himself. The next thing he knows, he’s studying to be a wizard with her help, and both of them are evading concerned parents, nosy landlords, and an extremely annoying boy named Wendell who finds out their secret and blackmails them over it.

This book unexpectedly has one of the most realistic-feeling depictions of someone learning magic that I’ve read. It involves a lot of actual studying, and an extremely cool scene in which Sam uses a passage from The Wind in the Willows to practice visualization of written description. It also has an unexpected “TV is bad” message. But mostly it’s just a lot of fun. The annoying Wendell gets turned into a TV set (and then end up even more annoying as it can’t be turned off), adults are helpful in the ways that only adults can be in stuff like telling other adults to go away, and a spider-alien who throws on a bathrobe to do a quick impersonation of a human is appalled to then have to maintain it for a game of gin rummy.

Also, Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine is a book that exists in this world.

Magic Grandfather

naomikritzer: (Default)

From: [personal profile] naomikritzer


Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine was the one Danny Dunn book I had growing up.

The portrayal of how computers worked was deeply questionable -- I think it's probably not one of the stronger books in that series.
ethelmay: (Default)

From: [personal profile] ethelmay


That was the only one we had as well. I did get most of the others from the library, but I actually liked that one the best. Possibly because I read it over and over before realizing it was part of a somewhat formulaic series, so the others were the ones that seemed more formulaic, if you see what I mean.
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