From School Library Journal
Grade 3-6–This installment in the twins' adventures opens with what seems to be a nightmare but is in fact reality: Beezel has turned into a mouse and is running away from a hungry cat. In
The Trimoni Twins and the Changing Coin (Bloomsbury, 2004), she and her sister Mimi had been given a coin that allows them to change any person or animal into any type of object. In this book, the 11-year-old twins are visiting Amsterdam with their tutor, Hector. His uncle has the second of three magical coins, the Shrinking Coin. He and his late best friend have spent the last 20 years looking for a treasure supposedly hidden in Uncle Hoogaboom's house. Smallcomb has an expressive style of writing, such as when she states two people are as different from each other as chocolate and salami. Alliterative exclamations generally have some inside joke concerning magic. There is a love story for Hector, the girls have terrible crushes on a famous teen actor related to Hoogaboom's late friend, and the mystery of the missing treasure is solved. Beezel is logical while Mimi is impulsive, leading to many humorous situations throughout this fast-paced fantasy. Fans of Anne Martin and Laura Godwin's
The Doll People (Disney, 2000) will likely enjoy this book. Presumably the next adventure in this amusing series will concern the missing and magical Mind Reading Coin.
–B. Allison Gray, John Jermain Library, Sag Harbor, NY Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
About the Author
Pam Smallcomb lives in Maryland with her husband, four kids, two cats, four rabbits, two guinea pigs, two dogs, and a parakeet. She is the author of The Last Burp of Mac McGerp and The Trimoni Twins and the Changing Coin.