Dandelion Fire
by N. D. Wilson
Book 2 of the 100 Cupboards unleashes another storm of breathtaking energy.
In Book 1, a Kansas farm became the doorway to one of the most fascinating new
fantasy worlds grown on American soil since Oz, a complex and threatening world that
seems to exist to test the courage of a lonely, self-doubting misfit named Henry
York. In the sequel, Henry and his Kansas cousins, aunt, uncle, best friend, and
even the local sheriff get pulled right into this world during the build-up to a
battle that may end it all.
They face terrifying enemies, confront mortal danger, and stumble bewildered from
one strange encounter to another while they learn the lay of the land and the ways
of its magic. And Henry continues his amazing transformation from the boy who was
afraid of everything to the one who smiles when his cousin tells him, "Now you're
scary." So it's more than just a heady fantasy filled with clever invention. It is a
powerful, spiritually moving story about a young man finding his identity, his
powers, his family, and his home - just in time to defend them from that which he
fears the most.
It begins when Henry learns that his adoptive parents have been rescued from a South
American hostage situation. Now they're splitting up and wrangling over who gets
custody of him. He doesn't feel much closeness to the Yorks; he would rather stay in
Henry, Kansas, with his Uncle Frank, Aunt Dotty, and three girl cousins, play
baseball with Zeke Johnson, explore the 100 cupboards in his bedroom and the magical
worlds they lead to, and perhaps find the place and people he originally came from.
But Henry's plans take a backseat to the demands of the magic growing within him.
In one moment of awe and glory, Henry is blinded by a shaft of lightning and has the
shape of a dandelion burnt into the palm of his hand. This is the beginning of a
transformation that could kill him or drive him mad, or that could gift him with a
powerful and healing magic. Before Henry's crisis awakens, an evil wizard named
Darius snatches him from his Kansas bedroom, planning to enslave the boy and absorb
his power. Darius, in turn, serves the witch Nimiane, who has just been freed from
her imprisonment, and who could drain all the life out of the land Henry comes from
- a land that may be destroyed before he gets to know it.
Stopping Nimiane and Darius will mean fleeing, hunted, from one end of the world to
the other; joining forces with faeries whose governing council has sworn to betray
Henry and his missing father; risking his own life and the lives of others to reach
a besieged city before it falls beneath a storm of evil magic; and finally being
named with his own name so that he can stand against the enemy with full command of
the power hidden within him.
I gasped at the emotional impact of Frank Fat-Faerie's final instructions to Henry,
from "You get into the city" to "Write my name on a bit of stone." Knowing that Nate
Wilson also writes for something cryptically described as a "trinitarian journal," I
was also bowled over by his description of the christening ritual, which includes
the words "The true Gods shall be the God before him" - a statement that begs for
theological analysis that, alas, I cannot give it in this space. I took great
pleasure in seeing the shape of Henry's homeworld come gradually into focus, for him
as well as myself, and in recognizing the deep roots of classic story beneath the
green and gold profusion of this tale.
It is old and new at the same time. It is a thrilling adventure with a spiritual
journey at its heart. It is touched with a gift for vivid and original words, words
that richly paint scenes never seen before. And though the ending is as satisfying
as anyone could desire, it leaves you wishing for more. So you'll be encouraged to
know that the series isn't finished yet. A third book, The Chestnut King,
is still to come.
Robbie Fischer
USA
Recommended Age: 12+
If you would like to contact Robbie, you may do so here.