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The Whatnot (The Peculiar), by Stefan Bachmann

The Whatnot (The Peculiar), by Stefan Bachmann



The Whatnot (The Peculiar), by Stefan Bachmann

PDF Download The Whatnot (The Peculiar), by Stefan Bachmann

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The Whatnot (The Peculiar), by Stefan Bachmann

The Whatnot is the acclaimed international bestseller and sequel to Stefan Bachmann's riveting debut novel, The Peculiar, which Publishers Weekly called "an absolute treat for readers of any age," and which the Los Angeles Times compared to "Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment, Charles Dickens's A Tale of Two Cities, and more recent classics, such as J. K. Rowling's Harry Potter and Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events."

Twelve-year-old Pikey Thomas is missing an eye, a family, and friends of any sort. One day, running from bigger boys set on bullying him, Pikey finds himself in front of a grand, beautiful house. There he meets and helps a black-winged faery who is injured. It's a small gesture of kindness and bravery in steam-powered Victorian London, where faeries, now banned, are on the run or imprisoned; where the human armies are preparing for war; and where the changeling Bartholomew Kettle, aided by Arthur Jelliby, still searches for his missing sister, Hettie. This is the epic, dark, imaginative, unforgettable, and ultimately hopeful sequel to Stefan Bachmann's acclaimed debut novel, The Peculiar.

"An enthralling read . . . Bachmann combines the pleasures of a Dickensian cast of characters with the eldritch qualities of British faerie lore and adds a touch of steampunk to entice readers into an alternate universe in which the English are on the verge of war with the fay. The breathtaking beauty of his prose is coupled with a plot that also leaves his audience breathless."—School Library Journal

  • Sales Rank: #700717 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2013-09-24
  • Released on: 2013-09-24
  • Format: Kindle eBook

From School Library Journal
Gr 5-8-This sequel to The Peculiar (HarperCollins, 2012) is an enthralling read in its own right, but even better for those acquainted with the first book. Bachmann combines the pleasures of a Dickensian cast of characters with the eldritch qualities of British faerie lore and adds a touch of steampunk to entice readers into an alternate universe in which the English are on the verge of war with the fay. Pikey Thomas is an urchin who's been "fairy-touched," which has left him with one eye that can see into the Old Country, but also endangers him in a society that is hostile to anything connected to faeries. Moreover, his real eye seems to be on a pendant around the neck of Hettie, the little girl who was captured by faeries in The Peculiar. Her brother, Bartholomew, has been trying to rescue her ever since and, when he comes across Pikey in a London prison, he effects the boy's release and enlists his aid. Bachmann writes with unnerving assurance for someone so young. (He was still in his teens when he completed the two books.) He describes an army camp: "It spilled out of the huddle of low stone houses like intestines from a goat's belly." The breathtaking beauty of his prose is coupled with a plot that also leaves his audience breathless.-Miriam Lang Budin, Chappaqua Library, NYα(c) Copyright 2013. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

From Booklist
The changeling Bartholomew Kettle is still searching for his sister, Hettie, who was swept into the world of faeries after they prevented the sinister Lord Lickerish from opening the door inside Hettie and allowing faeries to invade England. But Hettie has been lost in the Old Country for years, and it will take all of her effort—as well as Bartholomew’s and that of street urchin Pikey—to survive the machinations of the Sly King and save England once again. Bachmann’s follow-up to The Peculiar (2012) has the same dense world building as his first book, though his skills have grown and his writing is much smoother. That said, the characterization still sometimes suffers under the weight of his world building, and the final resolution drags somewhat. Bartholomew often fades to the background in favor of the understandably sullen Hettie and the desperate and destitute Pikey, who has admirable grit. Readers who like their fantasy dark and their faeries sinister will find something to enjoy here. Grades 4-7. --Snow Wildsmith

Review
“Exhilarating . . . Bachmann writes with a skill that belies his youth . . . and he has a genius for envisioning fairy magic and architecture. . . . Readers will want to start with The Peculiar, and immediately dive into this fine tale.”- (Publishers Weekly (starred review))

“Enthralling . . . The breathtaking beauty of [Bachmann’s] prose is coupled with a plot that also leaves his audience breathless.” (School Library Journal)

“[A] breathless read, one that will have readers hoping for a peaceful outcome as fervently as its characters do.” (Kirkus Reviews)

Most helpful customer reviews

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful.
Such a disappointing sequel
By Catriona
Well where to start? I am still kind of lost for words. I absolutely loved the first book 'The Peculiar'. The idea was unique and the characters very likeable. - SPOILER ALERT - The second book had none of the charm of the first one. The new main character Thomas is likeable enough. It is absurd though that he is as loyal to Bartholomew Kettle as he is given how badly Bartholomew treats him the entire time. As for Bartholomew - he has not returned home after his sister disappeared and wandered the world for years in search for her. I mean how belivable is it that he would not dare to go back to see or comfort his mother or send word to her? Arthur Jelliby the lovable reluctant hero of book one does hardly appear at all and plays no role in the book whatsoever. The elven king aims to conquer the world but has no backstory, character development or motivation attached to him at all. And in the end after years have passed since the events of book one, all the faeries happily go home as do Barthy, his sister and their new found brother Thomas? Not very likely.
The mood of the book was downright bleak. Barthy was portrayed throughout as really nasty and unlikeable. The narrated events hardly sum up to something that could be called a coherent story.
I do not know what happened here but this was ONE BIG DISAPPOINTMENT.

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
An OK first book, Outstanding second book. can't wait for the third
By Luis71
I came across his first book in one of those book clubs in an airport lounge where you drop one and pick one. I just finished one book and the peculiar was the only one non-romance book they had, as I had a 6 hours flight ahead of me I picked it up without much expectations. I must say I liked it but it was nothing spectacular, however a couple of months later I ran out of things to read and while browsing in Amazon I saw this one.
Bought the kindle edition, started reading it that night and I'm sure glad I did. It took me a couple of nights to read it, thoroughly enjoyed it and since then I cannot get that book out of my head.
The first book just toyed with the idea of a somewhat familiar world... another London in another planet Earth in a parallel universe. the characters were there, the description was there but it was so mundane that there was nothing truly engaging for me... no powerful wizard that didn't know he was a wizard, no fire breathing dragons, no weakling on an impossible journey, etc.
now the second book is the real article, he sold me that world in the first pages; the action never stopped, the character got better and better... the house that is constantly changing, the eyes that can see through parallel worlds and especially the jail description were that out of the ordinary details that set him apart from the Rolling, Tolkien, etc impersonators that litter this book category...

If you enjoyed Harry Potter, Eragon, Percy Jackson even Games of Thrones you must read this one.

As for the author I'm trilled he is only 19, that means I will hopefully have many years of good books ahead of me but if you (Stefan) are reading this please, please, please understand that what made the first book good and the second superb was that it were short, fast paced highly innovative books. keep it that way, I have seen so many failures of great sequels:
-Paulini with Eragon: first book was great, second unbelievable, third meh, fourth a total disaster.
-Martin with Game of Thrones: best first book ever, second was even better than first, third ok, fourth bad and fifth an absolute pain to finish.

I do not know what is going on with the fourth book, authors have success writing 200-300 pages fast pace books and then they decide to bring in a fourth book that is 800-900 pages that introduces so many new characters and plots going nowhere that the magic is lost. even Rolling tried her hand in the fourth and fifth books of Harry Potter with 800+ pages, luckily she pulled it off... most are not so skilled.
So, my dear Stefan... I would love to read an 800 pages book if it is as good as your second but do yourself a favor and if you see your books are breaking the 400 pages mark; call a great editor (Riordan's maybe?), a friend and someone that hates your writing... listen to them, find a middle ground and make the changes you need to. you had a pretty good start but remember others had too, only to crash and burn... please, please learn from their mistakes because I want more of what you showed me in the second book. A lot more.

Thanks for a great trip, I'll be looking out for more and good luck,

Luis

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
A wonderful story told with rare beauty.
By mcclean
As with its prequel, The Peculiar, this is a book with beautiful writing. This is a rare find. It is a good story. It is beautifully expressed and the characters are so well-drawn that they feel like companions on a thrilling and wonderful adventure.

See all 20 customer reviews...

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