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44 of 46 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Well I'll be hornswaggled
I've said it before and I'll say it again. When it comes to children's books, nine times out of ten the old phrase, "Don't judge a book by its cover" is bupkiss. Sometimes the cover is the only reason a child's going to pick up a book in the first place. And the image on the front of "Horns and Wrinkles" . . . . well, let's just say that more than one kid is going to find...
Published on September 7, 2006 by E. R. Bird

versus
3.0 out of 5 stars Thrown together
I feel so mean giving this 3 stars next to all these 5's, but I never really got into this book. It felt kind of made up as it went a long. I am hoping this is just because I'm too old for the book, and that my neice will like it as much as everyone else says they did.
Published on November 23, 2008 by ChaCha


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44 of 46 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Well I'll be hornswaggled, September 7, 2006
This review is from: Horns and Wrinkles (Hardcover)
I've said it before and I'll say it again. When it comes to children's books, nine times out of ten the old phrase, "Don't judge a book by its cover" is bupkiss. Sometimes the cover is the only reason a child's going to pick up a book in the first place. And the image on the front of "Horns and Wrinkles" . . . . well, let's just say that more than one kid is going to find it a pretty tantalizing selection. Aside from the dreamlike quality and the subdued color scheme, there's also the fact that it sports a boy looking directly at you while wearing a nose like a rhinoceros. But pretty covers are a dime a dozen. "How's the story?", cry the parents of the fifth-graders who are straining to grab a copy or four of the pretty pretty book. Well, I've got some good news for you. This book is superb. A peach. A doll. It's a fun American story that puts the realism back into the term "magical realism". Add in a bunch of dreamy chapter-heading illustrations and what you have is a great little find.

It's kind of hard to pinpoint exactly when it all began, but it probably got started when that nasty boy Duke started dangling his cousin Claire off the Steel Girder Bridge just outside of town. Claire's been the victim of Duke's bullying for a long time now, but on this day something changed. Next thing anyone knew, Claire was sailing serenely down the Mississippi with a nice orange tennis shoe-wearing old lady and Duke had a horn growing out of his nose. Now everybody in Blue Wing, Minnesota knows that if something weird happens, it's probably going to be river related. This part of the Mississippi causes all kinds of oddities. Everything from fairies sightings to river and rock troll incidents, and it's no end of trouble to the town's residents. Next thing you know Duke's family's turned to stone and Claire has just found herself in the company of some fast-talking nylon bicycle-suit-wearing river trolls. Now she and her cousin must help these oddly amusing critters on their peculiar quest or Duke's family will remain stone forever. The thing is, Duke's horn gets bigger every time he bullies someone, and worse still, he likes the change. Something is going to have to be done, and it's up to Claire to do it.

A native Minnesotan, it's clear that Helgerson knows of which he speaks. Part of what's so nice about this book is the fact that it feels oddly realistic. This story takes place partly in a small town where peculiar magical river occurrences are just a fact of life. One of my favorite parts in the book involved the resident sheriff, a man who's seen it all and treats the fact that some people have been turned to stone without a blink. "There's folks in this town that choose not to believe in fortunetelling catfish, or low-flying buffalo, or whatever . . . I'll tell you straight out, I'm not one of them". This is like the show NYPD done small-town, Minnesotan, magic style. The book also has a deep and abiding knowledge of what small-town life is really like. When Clair's grandfather tells story after story of relatives who've dealt with river happenings, it feels natural. Like you're on a back porch listening to your relatives reminisce about their foolish ancestors. And then there's the fact that Helgerson just has a way with writing. There are sentences in this book like, "Tree branches remained bare but you could smell spring cooking inside them". Or when a river troll is threatened with a most gruesome punishment, "And if there's any funny business, I'll turn you into books. Thick ones with no pictures and tiny print". Thank God for humor. Thank Helgerson for filling this book with loads of it too.

The characters are what really impress, though. Duke is nasty. He's nasty on page one, he's nasty on page 119, and he's nasty on page 340. But it's not as if he's a one-note villain. Somehow or other, Helgerson has tapped directly into what makes a person a bully and has put all that knowledge into the character of Duke. He's a coward, and a liar, but you could never say he wasn't one hundred percent believable. The river troll trio that Claire and Duke take up with are also particularly enjoyable and surprisingly deep characters. At the beginning you get the three of them mixed up together. Then, oh so slowly, Helgerson pulls apart their personalities one by one. You begin to feel affection for Stump, a wariness of Jim Dandy, and a wariness verging on fear of Biz.

The editor of, "Horns and Wrinkles" once said of the book, "One of the things I like best about the book . . . is that it's truly Americana fantasy. I just can't think of too many other books for this age group that happen right here in the US of A". And boy has she got THAT right. Name the five best American children's works of fiction that were published this year. Go on. Name `em. If you're anything like me you started scratching your head at some point and muttering under your breath, "Does `Fly By Night' count? No, that's British". The fact of the matter is that American fantasies are rare shy little beasties. When someone wants to make a truly interesting tale for kids with roots firmly embedded in the soil of North America, you could end up with anything from Michael Chabon's, "Summerland" (an underrated title, if you ask me) or Diane Duane's, "So You Want To Be a Wizard". The nice thing about "Horns and Wrinkles" is that it's a truly Midwestern creation. The book is set between the Minnesota and Wisconsin bluffs in the whirling twirling currents of the mighty Mississippi. Ya can't get more Yankee than that!

The book isn't perfect, of course. Often I'd find myself a bit furious with Claire for continually helping out her cousin, even though it was obviously a bad idea. Helgerson justifies these multiple lapses in judgment in a variety of different ways, but never so much that they don't feel a little convenient. I mean, if Claire didn't keep following Duke hither and thither then this would be a very short story. Still, Duke uses his cousin again and again and she only gets back at him with little growls and sniping comments. Grow a backbone, girl!

In the interest of full disclosure, I should mention that "Horns and Wrinkles" won my heart lock, stock, and barrel when the appearance of a long-lost relative is explained away by a character saying, "We'll say he's a cousin visiting from Kalamazoo". Yay, my hometown! Also, the small illustrations by Nicoletta Ceccoli are worth the price of the title alone. All in all, if you find that you have to purchase a new fantasy title for the kiddies and you'd like to eschew the usual British tales that say, "Book One In An Exciting New Series" or words to that effect, this is the one to nab. This is not to say that a sequel to "Horns and Wrinkles" would not be more than welcome. But when it comes to rock solid writing and amusing details, this title stands on its own two feet.
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A book to share!, October 14, 2006
By 
Isobel Dash (New York, NY USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Horns and Wrinkles (Hardcover)
I gave this book to my 11 yr. old niece and she read it in two nights. That, above all else, is a recommendation of the highest degree. She said it's the best book she's read in years! I'm going to give a try next myself.
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Americana fantasy at its best!, September 20, 2006
This review is from: Horns and Wrinkles (Hardcover)
The perfect read aloud to share or the perfect book for the fantasy fan in your life to cozy up with. Just great for middle grade readers who are looking for something other than Harry Potter . . . Joe Helgerson's language is spry, surprising, and a sheer delight. You must read this book!
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Juvie Fantasy with a fantastic moral, September 8, 2007
By 
bhr "birdwoman" (Bryn Mawr, PA USA) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
This review is from: Horns and Wrinkles (Hardcover)
The universe created in this book - a pocket of magic trapped along the northern part of the Mississippi - is so very real and imaginable. The author has done such a fantastic job of portraying the fantastic that even his footnote on how to find the fictional town is cute and believable.

The story itself centers around a few main characters. The main three: Claire, her cousin Duke, and a strange, nameless old lady are introduced within the first few pages. Claire is the hero of this tome. She's pure and cute and feisty. Duke is her bully of a cousin, and his bullying ways lead him down a strange path.

Claire's family are not thoroughly described, and yet, you feel as if you know them anyhow, so good is the craft in these words. You can see her moody older sisters, her uncle the dog-trainer, her grandfather the storyteller.

The story did at times have a bit too much reliance on the magical, though, and I found myself a bit lost trying to follow just what the author was trying to express.

But in the end, it was a very good story with a very good hero and a very good lesson. A good easy read for any fantasy reader; a good find for a young adult.

(*)>
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Simply Wonderful, October 14, 2006
This review is from: Horns and Wrinkles (Hardcover)
Horns and Wrinkles is simply a wonderful book for kids and adults alike. I haven't been this enchanted with a book in awhile. The personalities of the characters jump off the pages and make you feel like you are running along the Mississippi and experiencing the magic yourself. This book is a must read for anyone looking for a little magic.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fantastic children's story, July 29, 2008
By 
Pluma (Petaluma, CA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Horns and Wrinkles (Paperback)
Very well written and charming children's story. My 2nd and 3rd grader both loved it and I enjoyed it as well. So many contemporary kid's books seem dumbed-down in vocabulary and structure but Horns&Wrinkles is a masterwork of children's fiction. The vocabulary is challenging but not beyond the reach of primary schoolers, the characters are varied and interesting while not being trite, and the plot is involved and engaging and never seems forced.
Unlike so much of contemporary children's entertainment there are no poop jokes. :) And when children misbehave or mouth off to their parents there are consequences. A great story for the whole family.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Witty and Fun Children's Fantasy, May 26, 2008
This review is from: Horns and Wrinkles (Paperback)
This fun, witty and well-written fantasy tells of Claire, who lives near a magical stretch of the Mississippi River between Minnesota and Wisconsin and of the adventure, or should I say trouble, she gets into because of her bully of a cousin, Duke.

The book opens with Duke hanging her by the ankles off a bridge over the Mississippi:

"The river I was hanging over was the Mississippi, which was flooding, all muddy and solid-looking as a freight train, about twenty feet below my ponytail. It was early May. None of the trees had turned green yet, but you could smell it coming fast."


Duke's bullying--and the magic of the river--lands him with a rhino-nose, with troll friends and no desire to go back home. That means that Claire, with the help of a magical old lady, other trolls, some lying crickets and some good luck, has to rescue him from a horrible fate.

The result is a ripping good yarn combined with colorful, sometimes beautiful, prose. Horns and Wrinkles is now in my top 20 favorite children's fantasies. It was pure chance that I came across it, but now I'm going to give it a blanket recommendation to my friends (adults and children)--read it!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I keep getting this one for brithday parties, September 30, 2007
By 
A. OFlaherty (Herndon, VA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Horns and Wrinkles (Hardcover)
This was a gift for my 6 year old twins for Christmas and I have purchased about 5-6 more to give as gifts for their friends. A good fantasy tale without pink and purple fairies (though there is fairy dust), interesting characters and a compelling, quirky plot. My husband and I competed to see who would read with my daughters as it was a good read for us too.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An excellent fantasy adventure powered by strong characterization evolves., December 10, 2006
This review is from: Horns and Wrinkles (Hardcover)
Joseph Helgerson's HORNS & WRINKLES tells of a river possibly under a spell: Claire's uncertain of the rumors until her cousin takes a swim in it and sprouts a long horn. Can she solve the riddle of the changing waters and help him? An excellent fantasy adventure powered by strong characterization evolves.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Litland.com loves Horns and Wrinkles!, February 4, 2010
This review is from: Horns and Wrinkles (Paperback)
This story is reminiscent of old-time folklore passed down the generations. It brings forth visions of when those who lived along and worked the lakes and rivers in past centuries spoke of its magical properties, and of forests full of trolls and fairies. Helgerson successfully invokes feelings of nostalgia amongst his readers similar to reading a Mark Twain story but without as much southern slang, a modern-day touch which may make it more appealing to some readers. The writing style is easy, fluent and interesting, building in fun quips such as when Claire tries to see inside her own eyes: "I crossed my eyes for a look at myself". Between the antics of Claire, Duke, and the trolls, plus character's telling tales of the past, this book has one adventure after another and is sure to hold your attention. You'll resist the urge to shout hooray too! This is really an enjoyable book for all ages that I highly recommend!

See our full review using character education guidelines at [...] and our commentary for discussion at [...]
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Horns and Wrinkles
Horns and Wrinkles by Joseph Helgerson (Hardcover - September 11, 2006)
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