Tag Archives: Ursula Vernon

Summer in Orcus

Oh, I love this book so much. I was hooked from the first page (see below) and it just got better and better until the sheer perfection of the ending. I don’t want to spoil anything for anyone who hasn’t read it yet, so suffice it to say than it is a very unusual, beautiful, funny, and touching portal fantasy. Orcus and The Last Unicorn are the two books on this entire blog that I would implore you to read as soon as possible, regardless of whether you have a child to read them to. And if you do have a child to read them to, you’re all in for a great treat.

A tiny tangential note: I wonder what it would have looked like if Ursula Vernon (aka T. Kingfisher) had done her own illustrations for this book. I love her art work and Lauren Henderson’s illustrations of the main character come across as very young and delicate to me in a way that doesn’t quite jibe with my vision of her. But reasonable minds can differ and it isn’t a flaw in the glorious book.

Author: T. Kingfisher

Illustrator: Lauren Henderson

The Last Unicorn

I have very little to say about this book because it speaks for itself so beautifully. It is my absolute favorite book and has been since I stumbled on it in a used bookstore as a young teen. (The snippets of the movie I had somehow seen pieces of terrified and confused me as a young child, but I got over that with time. Beagle himself wrote the screenplay, and the studio who made it later later split and became Studio Ghibli, all of which is very cool.) I loved reading it to the boys and they each have a signed first edition that the absolutely lovely Peter Beagle inscribed to them (for more on that encounter, see my entry on The Sneetches and Other Stories).

I’m not alone in loving this book; over and over again I’ve seen authors pay tribute to it. For example, Ursula Vernon (aka T. Kingfisher), another especial favorite of mine (and of the boys), notes:

It is made of spun glass and fairytales and iron knives and there are individual lines that I would give my lungs to have written.

She’s right. I mean, my goodness, just look at the first page below.

Author: Peter S. Beagle

Illustrator: N/A

Hamster Princess: Harriet the Invincible

[I wrote almost all of this entry (gulp) 10 years ago.]

I never, ever expected a princess book to be this popular. I picked it up because I enjoyed Ursula Vernon’s graphic novel for adults, Digger, and was curious about her writing for kids. Once I started reading it to the boys, they were completely hooked.
Roars of uproarious laughter kind of hooked.
They thought they knew where the story was going. It turns out that they didn’t. And they loved that.

Ursula Vernon is also T. Kingfisher and I’d happily recommend anything she’s written under either name (an entry on Summer in Orcus is long overdue).  Just keep in mind many of her books are decidedly not for children.  Of this series, this first entry was definitely our favorite, although we did enjoy the others that followed.

Author: Ursula Vernon
Illustrator: Ursula Vernon