Picture of author.
21+ Works 1,643 Membros 40 Críticas

About the Author

Disambiguation Notice:

(eng) L. G. Bass is a pseudonym of Laura Geringer.

Image credit: reading at 2018 Gaithersburg Book Festival By Slowking4 - Own work, GFDL 1.2, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=69292206

Séries

Obras por Laura Geringer

Associated Works

The Guardians (2012) — Autor — 46 exemplares
The Guardians Collection (2018) — Autor — 25 exemplares

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Outros nomes
Bass, L.G.
Data de nascimento
1948-02-23
Sexo
female
Locais de residência
New York, New York, USA
Educação
Barnard College
Yale University
Ocupações
journalist
teacher
book reviewer
editor
Nota de desambiguação
L. G. Bass is a pseudonym of Laura Geringer.

Membros

Críticas

Before SANTA was SANTA, he was North, Nicholas St. North--a daredevil swordsman whose prowess with double scimitars was legendary. Like any swashbuckling young warrior, North seeks treasure and adventure, leading him to the fiercely guarded village of Santoff Claussen, said to be home to the greatest treasure in all the East, and to an even greater wizard, Ombric Shalazar. But when North arrives, legends of riches have given way to terrors of epic proportions! North must decide whether to seek his fortune...or save the village.

When our rebellious hero gets sucked into the chaos (literally), the fight becomes very personal. The Nightmare King and his evil Fearlings are ruling the night, owning the shadows, and sending waves of fear through all of Santoff Clausen. For North, this is a battle worth fighting...and, he's not alone. There are five other Guardians out there. He only has to find them in time.
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
PlumfieldCH | 24 outras críticas | Sep 21, 2023 |
Like others I came into this series due to curiosity after watching "Rise of the Guardians", which is based on this series' storyline. If you haven't and you do want to read this whole thing, start with "Man in the Moon" followed by "The Sandman: The Story of Sandman Sandsnoozie". You won't miss out on all that much if you cannot get your hands on those two picture books, since the books cover them for the most part in flashbacks and narration, but it helps to start from 'the beginning'.

This is the story of Nicholas St. North. A vagabond who, big shocker, discovers he has a heart of gold, even if he's still prideful. He rescues a magical village of inventors (half made of children and led by a wizard - basically a kid's paradise) from enemies and soon starts living there.

Now I am a big "Rise of the Guardians" fan. I saw it twice in theaters and I'm still hoping for a sequel or something further. Even with my experience with book-to-movie adaptations, this was not even close to what I was expecting.

This series is definitely targeted at very, very, very young children. Even though "The Guardians" is a chapter book series, it could easily be a child's first chapterbook series. The prose is simple and repetitive, like the reader might have forgotten aspects in the short time it took to read the already short narrative. The problems are simplistic and things children would care about more than adults - naptime and getting rid of it so kids can play forever, snacks before sleeping and things like that. The adults in the story outside of the protagonists are forgotten by and large simply because they are adults and therefore less important. You have to 'love' the way stories like these heavily separate adults and children and yet never define what exactly differentiates a child and an adult, even though every being in existence can apparently tell the difference. Why are the adults put to sleep and the children are victims of the latest disaster? Because young children are the audience and need to feel some sense of danger, that's why. There isn't even an age cut-off, which is the route most stories like this take.

A problem with the series is also that it doesn't seem to want to stick to being a children's story. I believe that a person of any age could enjoy this series, but I don't think someone very, very young would get a lot of what's in here. There are references to too many fairy tales and things that would go right over a kid's head, although if you are reading this with a child it might be a great learning opportunity for them.

There are some great things about this series. One of the oft-repeated themes is to encourage children, and people in general, to follow their dreams and do what makes them happy. Don't stick to one single path because people learn differently and solve problems differently. Also listen to others. Show compassion. Different peoples can get along if focus on working together and learn about each other. There's a strong push against forced obedience and a system of status quo, much like modern education and government. These are great messages for kids, parents and teachers.

Unfortunately there's also a lot that's bad about it. There are so many men in this series versus the single female protagonist and female spirit that guards Santoff Claussen (the principle town) that it gets a bit grating. Joyce could solve have solved this by using more than two female fairy tales (especially before the third novel when they finally show up) or by simply making the characters he outright made up, like the wizard and the moon guardians, female, but he didn't. Most of the mentioned children are boys and the parents are genderless and mentioned as a mob. The only one given a name is a man, and he's only given a name because there's some joke about every child in the family being named after him. The rest of the protagonists are male and the primary antagonists are male. A good female character to lead the story along is a great start, but it doesn't make me feel like this series is even targeted at a female audience, especially when she is constantly pushed to the background and the men keep repeating how much they have to protect her. Sure, she's got snuff and she does her own fighting a number of times, but not without disobeying others and once after she gets captured and damseled. Too many other women are fridged for backstory, like the Man in the Moon's nameless mother, Tooth's mother and her people. There are also so many sexist stereotypes about women in these books that it's just pathetic and hard to read at times. Although to be fair, this might be one of the few things the film got right - there's only one primary female cast member, and others are extras.

This is a series that is hard to reconcile with the film. In point of fact, I find it hard to believe that this is the series the film is based off of, since the characters and environment (this is an Earth of a different universe, not ours) are so extraordinarily different. Four books in and Jack Frost has yet to show up at all and we only just found out Pitch's backstory. His powerset is different than how it works in the films and the whole 'guardians' concept is transformed. Several principle characters fail to show up in the film, although this might be in preparation for sequels.

If you want to read more about this universe and at least learn the original backstories for these characters, go ahead and read this series. It's a fast read. Don't expect too much.
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
AnonR | 24 outras críticas | Aug 5, 2023 |
 
Assinalado
lcslibrarian | Aug 13, 2020 |

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Associated Authors

Arnold Lobel Illustrator
Dirk Zimmer Illustrator
Bagram Ibatoulline Illustrator
Leonid Gore Illustrator
Lauren Rille Cover designer

Estatísticas

Obras
21
Also by
2
Membros
1,643
Popularidade
#15,628
Avaliação
½ 3.7
Críticas
40
ISBN
77
Línguas
5

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