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The Wishing Moon [Hardcover]

Michael O. Tunnell (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)


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Book Description

June 3, 2004
Aminah is an orphan living on the streets of Al-Kal'as. When she appeals to the princess for help, the black-hearted wife of Aladdin throws an old lamp at her head. The lamp holds an obstreperous jinni who informs Aminah that she can make three wishes after each full moon. With the jinni's magic, Aminah regains security and comfort, and she even assembles a makeshift family. Still, Aminah cannot achieve true happiness until she has improved the lives of the people she left behind. Meanwhile, the power-hungry princess hunts down Aminah and the lamp. Will Aminah's good deeds lead to her demise? This fanciful yarn about what happens to the lamp after Aladdin will enchant readers who relish action, adventure, fantasy, and humor.

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Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal

Grade 5-9–In this expansion of a story from the "Arabian Nights," Tunnell tells how Aminah, who has been struggling to survive after the death of her parents, comes to be hit on the head by Aladdin's lamp. Near starvation, the 14-year-old goes to the Sultan's palace to ask his daughter, who is Aladdin's wife, for help. Annoyed at being approached by a beggar, Princess Badr throws the dented old lamp at Aminah without realizing its worth. Before long, the girl figures out how to summon the jinni and uses her newfound powers to improve her own lot and the world around her. Aminah is perspicacious enough to determine the rules of the jinni's magic and work them to her advantage, but her naïveté causes her to miscalculate the impact her new riches will have on others. Moreover, Princess Badr has come to understand the lamp's value and is exerting her influence to get it back, which puts Aminah in constant peril. Add a love story and a jealous would-be lover to the mix and all the requirements of a satisfying fairy-tale elaboration are satisfied. While not as well written as, say, Robin McKinley's Beauty (HarperCollins, 1978) or Spindle's End (Putnam, 2000), this novel is fast-moving and suspenseful enough to hold readers' interest.–Miriam Lang Budin, Chappaqua Public Library, NY
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Gr. 6-9. Aladdin's lamp is back in this fanciful tale of Aminah, an orphaned teen left to be a beggar in the streets of Al-Kal'as. When she pluckily approaches the sultan's daughter for work, the haughty princess flings her husband Aladdin's old oil lamp at the girl. The royal was not aware of the lamp's magic powers, and now Aminah has stumbled onto the road to riches. Get ready for high adventure along with constant suspense as Aminah waits for the princess to realize her error. Meanwhile, Aminah forges a relationship with Jinni, the lamp's witty and provocative genie, as the two cooperate to use the lamp in the most enlightened ways. Aminah strives to do good with her magic, and yet the tale skips preachiness and goes for rich characterizations and a strong, suspenseful plot worthy of the Arabian Nights. Anne O'Malley
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 12 and up
  • Hardcover: 272 pages
  • Publisher: Dutton Juvenile; Later printing edition (June 3, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0525471936
  • ISBN-13: 978-0525471936
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.7 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 15.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #330,418 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

I love books! This love affair began when I was small. My grandmother who raised me would read to me every day: fairy tales, comic books, and wonderful picture books like Caps for Sale and Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel. I soon discovered that books were the world's best teachers and entertainers. So, naturally, I grew up wanting to spend my life working with books.

When it came time to pick a profession, I decided to study law (which doesn't involve the kind of books I like). I was well into my university course work to prepare me for law school when something happened that changed my plans. At the time, I was working for an automobile dealer in Salt Lake City, Utah, and the service manager asked me to deliver a car to a customer at a nearby elementary school. The second I walked through the school doors, I was flooded with the strangest feelings. I remembered my favorite books and my magical childhood years. The next day I changed my major to education. Since then, I've completed several degrees, all of them relating to reading, children's literature, and teaching.

As with many avid readers, I harbored, since childhood, the wish to create my own stories. I wrote off and on when I was young, and then tried my first novel during my middle twenties (it was rejected by twenty or thirty publishers). Then for a number of years, instead of creating stories I channeled my writing efforts into professional educational books and journal articles. All the while, my desire to write books for young readers stayed strong. In the early 1990s, I found my way back to writing stories. My first effort was the manuscript for the picture book Chinook!, which was accepted on my third submission attempt by Tambourine Books (William Morrow).

Because I teach children's literature courses at a university, people sometimes ask if my teaching helps me to be a better writer. After all, I teach my students about children's books, what makes some books "better" than others, and I have, as a part of my professional endeavors, critiqued books for review journals. Therefore, I should know what makes for good writing and what doesn't. However, when I began writing my own books I discovered critiquing someone else's work is an entirely different process than creating your own stories. Perhaps I was simply too close to my own work, which made applying what I thought I knew about quality literature difficult. In any case, I had a lot to learn (and the learning has just begun!) about the creative process. I guess writers are born perhaps more than they are made. (I feel the same way about teachers.) So, part of the challenge has been to find and cultivate any spark of literary creativity with which I might have been blessed.

For more about Michael O. Tunnell, see the following sources:

Something About the Author, volume 103. Edited by Alan Hedblad. The Gale Group, 1999, pp. 168-173.

The Eighth Book of Junior Authors and Illustrators. Edited by Connie Rockman. H.W. Wilson, 2000, pp. 529-533.

Something About the Author, volume 157. The Gale Group, 2005, pp. 247-252

ALSO SEE MY WEBSITE: http://www.michaelotunnell.com

 

Customer Reviews

6 Reviews
5 star:
 (4)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Fun and Well Done, September 10, 2004
This review is from: The Wishing Moon (Hardcover)
A throw back to good old-fashioned storytelling, WISHING MOON is a refreshing read--a step away from the rampant political correctness (the new didacticism) and/or the hard-edged problem scenarios so often rewarded in today's children's book world. It deserves the starred review given by Kirkus (see below), which sums up how I feel about this book.

Kirkus Reviews
starred review
In this captivating original sequel to Aladdin, the genie gets a real workout when its lamp falls into the hands of an orphaned street child. Fourteen-year-old Aminah's bleak future takes a wild turn for the better when an old lamp sails out of the palace window and hits her on the head. But rather than use her wishes to live in splendor or to punish enemies, Aminah flummoxes the genie by searching out decent-hearted people engaged in helping the poor and endowing them with magical abilities. Predictably, the petulant, mercurial genie-who tends to show anger by spitting snakes, or blowing up its own head-steals the show, but Aminah puts in a sturdy performance too, as an idealistic but not entirely naive do-gooder with a temper of her own, and plenty of gumption. Modern sounding dialogue-"I wish you'd settle down!"-and the genie's breezily cryptic references to pizza, New York, and other items from Aminah's future give the tale a contemporary tone without spoiling the Arabian Nights flavor. Tunnell adds suspense with a subplot involving the efforts of Aladdin's evil wife to recover the lamp, and closes with a perfectly executed twist. (Fiction. 11-15)
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Interesting..., August 5, 2005
This review is from: The Wishing Moon (Hardcover)
I have never read anything quite like this book. And I mean that as a good thing. It is a new take on the Arabian Nights stories, and a very good one at that.

Aminah, a young beggar girl, goes to the princess to ask her for help. Their fathers knew eachother, so she has reason to hope. However, the princess scorns her and throws and old lamp at her, which later turns out to be Aladdin's lamp. (Aladdin is the princess's husband) Aminah gets three wishes every month. However, her Jinni likes to trick people, so she has to watch out what she wishes for.

Soon she is living like royalty, with her own cook and a boy named Idris that she picked up off the street living with her. However, she finds her wealth hollow. She now has an endless supply of money, so she uses her wishes to help other people in need. Meanwhile, the vengeful princess realizes what she cast away and is searching madly for Aminah.

Eventually, Aminah finds a young man in need of help. He turns out to be a man that had been kind to her once when she was poor. So Aminah is happy and her relationships with her cook (Barra), Idris, Jinni and Hassan (the kind baker) slowly develop. However, because of the way she acquired the lamp, she must hide her past from those she loves. But this takes a terrible toll. Idris runs off when he overhears something by accident. Will she ever find him again. And she loves them all, but who will she choose, Hassan, Idris or Jinni? And then the man she loves is captured by the princess and she must find a way to get them all out of the city.

I really enjoyed this book. The characters were very believable and well developed. Aminah was a likeable character and I literally cringed when she made a bad choice. However, it has a happy ending and a good moral. So I say, fantasy lovers, read it! Based on the two other reviews, this book isn't getting enough attention!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Left wishing for something better..., June 29, 2009
By 
Meremere (Bay Area, CA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Wishing Moon (Hardcover)
"Wishing Moon" continues the story of Aladdin, after he's become a prince. Aminah, an orphaned beggar is "gifted" the magic lamp by the selfish princess, who thinks the lamp is a piece of rubbish. Then the story begins.

I tried to like Aminah's character, but was left feeling like the author couldn't make up his mind as to whether she would be kind-hearted, stubborn, selfish (as was the princess, thus contradicting Aminah's more "likable" personality??), or self-seeking. Aminah demonstrates all of these personalities during the course of this novel. I found Idris, a beggar boy befriended by Aminah, and Barra- Aminah's cook, to be much more likable, consistent characters.

The author also throws in references to the future and other fairy-tales. While I enjoyed certain moments of the book (the enchanted thawb and romance with the bread maker), I think the novels "Ella Enchanted" and "Princess Ben" do a much better job of weaving tales and retelling fairy-tales than "Wishing Moon."
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
THE MOON MESMERIZED AMINAH. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
jinni nodded, whatso thou wantest, wishing moon, beggar girl, thousand dinars, two wishes, third wish, blue vase, gold ducats
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Full Moon of Full Moons, Captain of the Guard, Grand Vizier, Princess Badr, New York City, Miss Zaynab
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