Wizard at Work by Vivian Vande Velde
Wizards are supposed to be old men with pointy hats, so the young wizard professor at the center of this story makes himself look like an old man during the school year. He puts his disguise away at the beginning of his summer vacation and looks forward to a few months of puttering around the garden growing vegetables he won’t eat, when a chance encounter with a witch sets him off on a series of adventures to discover that appearances don’t always match reality.
Wizard at Work by Vivian Vande Velde is a collection of humorous takes on familiar fairy tale staples. Each chapter treats a different trope — Cinderella, dragons, magic mirrors, unicorns, and ghosts all put in appearances in some form or another — and together they form a sweet, simple, and gently funny collection of tales that will delight younger readers. Both characters and plot are drawn with broad strokes that keep the story moving along from one adventure to the next.
Though no one will ever accuse Wizard at Work of breaking new ground, it’s a fun novel that is age appropriate. The moral at the center of the story is subtly woven in, though evident throughout, as the wizard finds his own happy ending by looking past the surface and seeing the value deep within. At just 144 pages, an adult could breeze through this in an hour, but I think it would be a wonderful chapter book for early readers, or for a read-aloud book with younger children at bedtime.
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