The Evil Wizard Smallbone

The Evil Wizard Smallbone

by Delia Sherman
The Evil Wizard Smallbone

The Evil Wizard Smallbone

by Delia Sherman

eBook

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Overview

In a hilarious tale reminiscent of T. H. White, a lost boy finds himself an unlikely apprentice to the very old, vaguely evil, mostly just grumpy Wizard Smallbone.

When twelve-year-old Nick runs away from his uncle’s in the middle of a blizzard, he stumbles onto a very opinionated bookstore. He also meets its guardian, the self-proclaimed Evil Wizard Smallbone, who calls Nick his apprentice and won’t let him leave, but won’t teach him magic, either. It’s a good thing the bookstore takes Nick’s magical education in hand, because Smallbone’s nemesis—the Evil Wizard Fidelou—and his pack of shape-shifting bikers are howling at the borders. Smallbone might call himself evil, but compared to Fidelou, he’s practically a puppy. And he can’t handle Fidelou alone. Wildly funny and cozily heartfelt, Delia Sherman’s latest is an eccentric fantasy adventure featuring dueling wizards, enchanted animals, and one stray boy with a surprising knack for magic.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780763691929
Publisher: Candlewick Press
Publication date: 09/13/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Sales rank: 801,801
Lexile: 820L (what's this?)
File size: 1 MB
Age Range: 8 - 12 Years

About the Author

Delia Sherman is the author of numerous books and short stories for adults and children, including The Freedom Maze and “The Ghost of Cwmlech Manor” in Steampunk! An Anthology of Fantastically Rich and Strange Stories. She also enjoys teaching writing workshops. Delia Sherman lives in New York City with her wife.

I grew up in New York City, but when I was little, we spent most of our vacations with my mother’s family in Texas and Louisiana. It was before most people had air conditioning, so I have a lot of memories of still, thick nights when it was too hot to sleep, listening to the cicadas fiddling away outside and making up stories in my head. I always liked to write, but it never occurred to me that I could do it as a profession. I loved reading and talking about books, so I studied literature in college and graduate school. When I began teaching school in Boston, during my office hours, if no students showed up, I wrote stories full of folklore and history and old ballads. Eventually, one of them turned into my first novel, and I was off and running. Now I’m living in New York City again, where I go to cafes to write, because they have good chai and I like to people-watch when I can’t think of the next sentence.


My first Candlewick book, The Freedom Maze, took me just about forever to write—eighteen years, in fact, although I wrote (and finished) several other things while I was working on it. The story began with a dream. I was looking out my window at a garden and a maze that weren’t there in waking life. Somehow I knew they existed in the past and were part of something important. Figuring out what that was took me a while, as did discovering Sophie and her family. It’s a good thing I like researching almost as much as I like making up characters, because researching plantation life in slavery times took me even longer, and involved everything from dusty archives to driving back roads in Louisiana looking for ruined slave quarters. Getting them all to come together took me longest of all, but I loved making Sophie’s story all it wanted to be.

Three Things You Might Not Know About Me:

1. I was born in Japan and my first word was “mizu” (Japanese for “water”) even though I’m not Japanese, not even a little.
2. The first summer I went to sleepaway camp, I won a prize (invented, I think, just for me) for reading every book in the camp library.
3. I celebrated my nineteenth birthday in a yurt in Outer Mongolia.

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