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Odd and the Frost Giants by Neil Gaiman: Book Cover
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Odd and the Frost Giants by Neil Gaiman, Brett Helquist (Illustrator)

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(Hardcover)

  • Age Range: 8 to 12
  • Pub. Date: September 2009
  • 118pp
  • Sales Rank: 2,653
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: September 2009
    • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
    • Format: Hardcover, 118pp
    • Sales Rank: 2,653
    • Age Range: 8 to 12

    Synopsis

    Neil Gaiman takes listeners on a wild and magical trip to the land of giants and gods and back.

    In a village in ancient Norway lives a boy named Odd, and he's had some very bad luck: His fatehr perished in a Viking expedition; a tree fell on and shattered his leg; the endless freezing winter is making villagers dangerously grumpy.

    Out in the forest Odd encounters a bear, a fox, and an eagle—three creatures with a strange story to tell. Now Odd is forced on a journey to save Asgard, city of the gods, from the Frost Giants who have invaded it. It's going to take a very special king of twelve-year-old boy to outwit the Frost Giants, restore peace to the city of gods, and end the long winter.

    Someone cheerful and infuriating and clever....

    Someone just like Odd....

    Publishers Weekly

    In this simple but well-done tale, Newbery Medal–winner Gaiman (The Graveyard Book) introduces Odd, a boy with an injured leg whose Viking father died at sea. Odd befriends the Norse gods Odin, Thor and Loki, who have been transformed into animals and exiled from Asgard. The gods, having previously tricked and bested the Frost Giants, are now receiving some of their own medicine. Showing great ingenuity, Odd figures out how to reach Asgard and then convinces the Frost Giant that ruling Asgard isn't so great (after all, admits the giant, his prize, the beautiful goddess Freya, “only comes up to the top of my foot. She shouts louder than a giantess when she's angry. And she's always angry”). The gods and the giant, though powerful, come across as self-involved and vaguely simpleminded, clearly in need of a resourceful young fellow like Odd to help set things straight. Although less original than Coraline or The Wolves in the Walls, this enjoyable story should appeal to Gaiman's younger fans. Final art not seen by PW. Ages 8–12. (Sept.)

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    Biography

    Novelist Neil Gaiman has sent a British businessman tumbling into a fantastic underworld and had a devil and angel comically conspiring to thwart the Apocalypse. He found his biggest success, though, in Death, Dreams and Destruction -- and the four other similarly named siblings who controlled the reins of the human race's emotional impulses in his graphic-novel series The Sandman, a wholesale rejuvenation of graphic fiction that had everyone from Tori Amos to Norman Mailer spinning with, yes, Delirium.

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    Customer Reviews

    Boy Proves his Worthby KKR

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    November 21, 2009: This is a tale set in the far north, and it involves an under rated young boy who proves that he is valuable and important. Of course it has a happy ending. I bought it as a winter book for my 9 year old twin grandsons.

    Great book for a 5th grader!by k-l-c1962

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    November 21, 2009: The story kept him interested and worked well for a book report.


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