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The lost Wonderland diaries /

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Lost Wonderland diaries ; bk.1.Publisher: Salt Lake City : Shadow Mountain, [2020]Copyright date: 2020Description: 336 pages : illustrations ; 21 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781629727868
  • 1629727865
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • [Fic] 23
LOC classification:
  • PZ7.S25897 Lo 2020
Summary: "When Celia and Tyrus discover the four lost diaries of Charles Dodgson (a.k.a. Lewis Carroll), they are pulled into Wonderland and must solve riddles and puzzles to stop the Queen of Hearts from opening a door and taking over our world"--
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Holdings
Item type Current library Home library Collection Call number Vol info Copy number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Standard Loan Coeur d'Alene Library Juvenile Fiction Coeur d'Alene Library Book J SAVAGE (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Checked out 05/19/2024 50610022772193
Standard Loan (Child Access) Hayden Library Juvenile Series Hayden Library Book LOST WONDERLAND BK 1 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 50610022839406
Standard Loan Kellogg Library Juvenile Series Kellogg Library Book THE LOST WONDERLAND DIARIES BK 1 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) BK 1 1 Available 50610022113166
Standard Loan Liberty Lake Library Juvenile Fiction Liberty Lake Library Book J SAVAGE LOST WONDERLAND 1 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 31421000716051
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

Something monstrous has been found in the magic world of Wonderland and it wants to get out.



Lewis Carroll created a curious and fantastical world in his classic book Alice in Wonderland , but he secretly recorded the true story of his actual travels to Wonderland in four journals which have been lost to the world...until now.



Celia and Tyrus discover the legendary Lost Diaries of Wonderland and fall into a portal that pulls them into the same fantasy world as the White Rabbit and the Mad Hatter. However, Wonderland has vastly changed. A darkness has settled over the land, and some creatures and characters that Tyrus remembers from the book have been transformed into angry monsters.



Celia and Tyrus make their way through this unpredictable and dangerous land, helped by familiar friends including the Cheshire Cat and a new character, Sylvan, a young rabbit. Together, they desperately work to solve puzzles and riddles, looking for a way out of Wonderland. But the danger increases when the Queen of Hearts begins hunting them. Believing the two young visitors hold the key to opening multiple portals to multiple worlds, she will stop at nothing to capture them.



It's up to Celia and Tyrus to save Wonderland and the real world. It's a race against time before they are trapped in Wonderland forever.



Includes discussion questions.

"When Celia and Tyrus discover the four lost diaries of Charles Dodgson (a.k.a. Lewis Carroll), they are pulled into Wonderland and must solve riddles and puzzles to stop the Queen of Hearts from opening a door and taking over our world"--

Grades 4-6. Shadow Mountain.

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Publishers Weekly Review

When dyslexic, math-loving Celia Lofton meets avid reader Tyrus Weller at the library, the two become fast friends, especially when they realize they've both just moved to San Jose, Calif., and dread standing out as eighth graders. Then they stumble across a mysterious chest containing the lost diaries of Charles Dodgson, alias Lewis Carroll, from whom Celia is descended. Upon solving the chest's coded lock, the duo is sucked into the parallel world of Wonderland--which is even less logical and more dangerous than Carroll's depictions, with many of the inhabitants, including the White Rabbit, transformed into monsters. Heralded as "the Alice," the sole savior of Wonderland, Celia and Tyrus don't feel heroic; all they want is to find their way home, which may prove impossible. Savage (the Mysteries of Cove series) packs this loving homage to Carroll's work with riddles, puns, ciphers, and more, challenging his intrepid heroes at every turn, even as they learn to combine their strengths to overcome their weaknesses. Playing with typography to further embrace its source material's gleeful absurdity, this adventure captures the Wonderland spirit while updating it for a new era. Ages 8--11. Agent: Michael Bourret, Dystel, Goderich, and Bourret. (Sept.)

School Library Journal Review

Gr 3--5--Newfound friends Celia and Tyrus may have opposite interests, but they'll need both their skills to help them save Wonderland. When Celia and Tyrus discover Lewis Carroll's fabled lost diaries, they get pulled into Wonderland, though it's markedly different than the Wonderland that bookish Tyrus expected. As the two bound through episodic chapters, meeting both familiar characters and new ones, Celia flexes her logic skills to help decipher riddles and puzzles. Naturally, things get extra dicey when the Queen of Hearts shows her true colors. This novel succeeds at highlighting the ways in which different talents and interests are beneficial, and how well differences can complement each other. The "logic" of Wonderland feels alternately forced and adroit, and ultimately the tale never quite feels wonderful, despite its premise and pacing. Of positive note is a scene early in the book that demonstrates, via Celia, an excellent way to apologize when you've said something that has hurt someone, even if the result wasn't your intention. Celia is white, Tyrus is Black, and Wonderland is filled with primarily non-humanoid creatures. VERDICT There are many takes on Carroll's famous locale, and while this one is unique, it's not entirely successful. Consider for large collections or voracious fans of Wonderland reworks.--Taylor Worley, Springfield P.L., OR

Kirkus Book Review

Wonderland is in danger, and two unlikely heroes must work together to save it. San Jose eighth graders Celia and Tyrus have barely just met at the library when they find the lost diaries of Charles Dodgson--aka Lewis Carroll, narrator Celia's great-great-great-great-uncle--in which the author recorded his very real travels into the parallel world of Wonderland. When the kids accidentally open a doorway to Wonderland, they discover it has changed a lot since the time Carroll visited, and the place is a much darker, more dangerous world for its unhappy inhabitants, who live under the threat of a nefarious hauntstrosity. Tyrus is a bookworm and wordsmith while Celia is a math and logic whiz, and the story puts their newly minted friendship to the test as they learn to work together and use their skills to solve puzzles and riddles, running against time to save Wonderland and get back to their own world. Savage pays homage to Carroll's world with imagination as well as a notable love for math and literature while adding his own ingenious twists to the original. Both Celia and Tyrus struggle with bullying back home, and Celia's dyslexia is a constant source of frustration when other kids underestimate her intelligence, and the book ultimately offers a message of empowerment and self-love. Tyrus is brown-skinned and Celia is assumed white. A fun and clever return to Wonderland. (Fantasy. 10-14) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Author notes provided by Syndetics

J. Scott Savage is the author of the Mysteries of Cove and Farworld middle-grade fantasy series. He has published more than seventeen novels, visited more than 1,400 schools, and taught dozens of writing classes. He has four children, five grandchildren, and lives with his wife, Jennifer, in a windy valley of the Rocky Mountains.

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