INTERMEDIATE FICTION
Berry, Julie

Wishes and Wellingtons

(2) 4-6 The time-tested premise of three magic wishes foolishly squandered meets a djinni right out of the Thousand and One Nights and a pastiche late–Victorian London setting in this lively boarding school romp/fantasy/mystery/adventure. Maeve Merritt, reluctant student at Miss Salamanca's School for Upright Young Ladies, unleashes a grumpy djinni named Mermeros from a tin of sardines, and mayhem ensues. Maeve, our impulsive, plucky heroine with a talent for getting into scrapes, wastes her first wish in a fit of temper against the school's requisite mean girl. For her second wish, she treats herself and her two friends, a true-blue sidekick and a neglected orphan boy, to a magical whirlwind flight across Europe to Mermeros's homeland in Persia. As we wait on tenterhooks for Maeve's third and final wish, the plot gets a little overwrought, with the backstory of a curse, a mysterious ginger-bearded stalker, a creepy abandoned mansion, and threats posed by an evil, rapacious captain of industry. But all is saved by Berry's (The Scandalous Sisterhood of Prickwillow Place, rev. 9/14; The Emperor's Ostrich, rev. 7/17) palpable joy in original use of language. There are plums on every page. Maeve scorns her mother's choice of suitable companions for her as "the fluffy daughters of her feathery friends." The oppressive headmistress has "bewildering teeth." And who could resist a protagonist who describes a bloodcurdling scream as "eldritch"?

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