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The Wish Stealers
The Wish Stealers
Author: Tracy Trivas
Griffin Penshine is always making wishes. But when a sinister old woman tricks her into accepting a box of eleven shiny Indian Head pennies from 1897, Griffin soon learns these are no ordinary pennies, but stolen wishes. — This box of labeled pennies comes with a horrible curse: People in possession of the stolen coins are Wish Stealers, who will...  more »
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ISBN-13: 9780545287241
ISBN-10: 0545287243
Publication Date: 2010
Pages: 283
Rating:
  • Currently 4.5/5 Stars.
 2

4.5 stars, based on 2 ratings
Publisher: Scholastic
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review
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skywriter319 avatar reviewed The Wish Stealers on + 784 more book reviews
When an old woman presents young Griffin Penshine with a box full of eleven shiny 1897 Indian Head pennies, Griffin's life is turned upside down when she discovers that the pennies are actually stolen wishes! Griffin must return the stolen wishes, or else her own wishes still never come true ever again. But how will she return the wishes when many of those original wish-makers are no longer alive?

THE WISH STEALERS is a quick and interesting read with important lessons about individual strength buried within an entertaining tale.

I found most remarkable the way with which Tracy Trivas infuses this admittedly far-fetched tales with the universal morals of taking responsibility and action for your own happiness, instead of relying on wishful thinking. The late elementary/early middle schoolers that are the target audience for this book might miss that, but the subconscious implications are clear and make this a great tale to share with parent and child.

Several elements of THE WISH STEALERS unfortunately didn't quite ring true for me. Nearly all of the school scenes--hateful teachers, impossibly difficult workloads, quizzes in the first week of school--felt faked. Certain magical elements (such as the Macbeth witches) popped in and out of the story with seemingly no better reason than to add to the creepiness factor, while coincidences that help Griffin out with her task happen too serendipitously to be truly believable.

Nevertheless, young readers will be able to enjoy the seemingly challenging yet actually quite smooth way in which Griffin goes about righting other people's wrongs. THE WISH STEALERS is ultimately a charming story with a great message about the importance of believing in yourself and taking charge of your own happiness.


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