Wondrous Rex

Patricia MacLachlan

Book - 2020

Newbery Medal-winning author Patricia MacLachlan has written a magical and funny tale about the joy found in using words, sharing stories, and loving a wondrous dog named Rex.

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Subjects
Genres
Animal fiction
Published
New York, NY : Katherine Tegen Books, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers [2020]
Language
English
Main Author
Patricia MacLachlan (author)
Other Authors
Emilia Dzubiak, 1982- (illustrator)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
88 pages : illustrations ; 21 cm
Audience
8-12
Awards
A Junior Library Guild selection.
ISBN
9780062940988
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Seven-year-old Grace spends a lot of time with Aunt Lily, an author suffering from writer's block. Hoping to become more productive, Lily places an ad for an assistant, and soon a magician arrives at her door, offering his Labrador retriever, Rex, for the job. Rex is truly magical. In addition to possessing the usual canine charms, Rex can read, write, and pull up inspiring quotations from the web. In no time Lily is creating again, but the real change comes with Grace, a child who has been encouraged to write but feels intimidated by the process. Newbery-winner MacLachlan's spare but elegant prose touches on themes of self-confidence, the writer's craft, and the sense of well-being that can come from pet ownership. Descriptions of Lily's writers' group (and Grace's attempts to spy on them) add levity to the narrative, as do Rex's messages and his love of lemon cake. With a large font, generous line spacing, and frequent black-and-white illustrations, this book will please younger readers and inspire would-be wordsmiths.--Kay Weisman Copyright 2020 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

A charmed (and charming) dog, a language-loving girl, and an innate aunt-niece bond are among the alluring threads that MacLachlan (Dream Within a Dream) deftly weaves into this taut novel. Seven-year-old Grace's aunt Lily, a writer frustrated by her dearth of story ideas, posts an ad for an assistant--"for inspiration and some magic!" A magician soon appears at her door with unlikely assistant Rex, a Lab who is bored, "needs new work," and "will make you happy." That proves true when the dog suddenly types words from Toni Morrison on Lily's computer keyboard: "If you find a book you really want to read but it hasn't been written yet, then you must write it." This is the first of Rex's sly nudges that provide both Lily and Grace--a collector of words who hasn't yet discovered how to string them together--with the confidence and inspiration to find their creative voices. MacLachlan again proves her gift for shaping endearing and credible characters--even a magical canine--in this bright yet reflective story. Final art not seen by PW. Ages 8--12. (Mar.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Seven-year-old Grace knows a great many words, but she can't bring herself to string them together on paper.In her eyes, this gift is unique to her writer aunt, Lily, with whom she spends her afternoons. Lily, however, has found herself bereft of ideas, and out of desperation she puts out an ad for a writing assistant. Enter Rex: a dog whose apparent oddities cleverly conceal a magic that, while unexplained, is quietly remarkable. Rex inspires Lily almost immediately, and the two find happiness in their new partnership. Similarly, Rex inspires Grace to turn her words into stories. Her reservations will feel familiar to any fledgling pen-pusher: not knowing how to write what she feels, how to start, or how to press on. Those reservations extend into her everyday life, as it fills and changes in ways she never foresaw, but her small networkloving (if busy and often absent) parents, the wondrous Rex, Lily and her writing group, the encouraging teacher Ms. Luce, and steadfast, unflappable Daniel, Grace's best friendremains by her side throughout her writer's journey. MacLachlan spins from simple words an enigmatic, gentle, but perhaps too succinct tale. While Grace's first-person narration doesn't quite ring true to her young age, (a lack of contractions makes the prose oddly formal), charmingly scratchy pencil sketches scattered throughout mitigate this alienating effect. The only physical descriptions to be found are attached to the animal characters.Sweetly magical. (Fantasy. 8-12) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.