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The curse of Greg

Rylander, Chris. (Author).

The saga continues as Galdervatn spreads throughout the world, calling forth mythical monsters and new challenges for Greg and his Dwarven crew.

Book  - 2019
J FIC Rylan
1 copy / 0 on hold

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Location
Victoria Available
  • ISBN: 9781524739751
  • Physical Description 325 pages ; 22 cm.
  • Publisher [Place of publication not identified] : [publisher not identified], 2019.

Additional Information

Syndetic Solutions - Kirkus Review for ISBN Number 9781524739751
The Curse of Greg
The Curse of Greg
by Rylander, Chris
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Kirkus Review

The Curse of Greg

Kirkus Reviews


Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Greg (Dwarven name "Greggdroule," please don't use it) Stormbelly begins this sequel to The Legend of Greg (2018) by setting his pants on fire with a misdirected spell at a Gargoyle and ends by organizing an expedition to find a certain pivotal amulet in the episode's abrupt conclusion.In between he adds a diamond-pooping Rock Troll to his posse of staunch allies; battles elves in a literally spooky New Orleans cemetery; spends weeks imprisoned in Alcatraz by his Elven best frenemy, Edwin (who hints at an ominous plan to save the world by putting himself and a few other well-intentioned Elves in charge); and comes to realize that a bloodthirsty talking war axe isn't really a good thing for a pacifist to own. He also gets at least a line on a cure for the Elven potion that has apparently driven his beloved dad "kookier than ever." Unfortunately, between and even during the fun battle scenes and set pieces, Rylander breaks all too often for momentum-killing dwarfsplaining (enhanced, if that's the word, by footnotes) of Dwarven history and values, comparisons of Elf and Dwarf religions, digressions, and open-ended ruminations. Greg and Edwin present white, but the cast's Elves and Dwarves include some with brown skin; it's unclear whether the Goblins, Harpies, Trolls, Orcs, and other races here enjoy like diversity.A middle volume that turns more on moral and identity issues than keeping the plot rolling. (Fantasy. 11-13) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.