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Synopsis
The astromancers in Peter's star-touched village have an amazing device that nudges time--surely it wouldn't hurt if Peter used it to fix a few mistakes? Cozy fantasy alight with wonder from the author of Wicked Marigold. When Peter leads two Tinkerers to his family's inn in Stargazers Valley, he imagines they're like other astromancers, researchers from the Imperial College who study starstuff. The valley is a special place, where the magical aurora called the Skeins appear in the sky and starstuff falls in their wake, as thin and wispy as fluff from a seed pod. But starstuff is powerful, and astromancers are the only people allowed to handle it--a law enforced by the strict and stealthy Outbounder Task Force. When Peter discovers the Tinkerers have used starstuff to invent an incredible not-a-clock that can turn back time for a few minutes, he realizes it's his chance to undo his mistakes: if he can go back and put away his new boots, he doesn't need to add their destruction by falcons to his list of ten worst mistakes (#7: stepping on a star-eating newt). But while using the not-a-clock is easy, stopping using it is hard. And maybe not everything that feels like a mistake at the time actually is. Family, friendship, and budding self-confidence are at the heart of Caroline Carlson's stellar fantasy.
Is The Tinkerers appropriate for my child?
Suitable for most readers 8 and up.
A gentle, cozy fantasy about a boy learning to accept his mistakes and grow in confidence. No violence beyond mild peril (falcon incident with boots), no inappropriate content. Themes of self-acceptance, family, and friendship make this ideal for middle grade readers.
What to know going in
This book has mild violence, no sexual content, and clean language.
Who'll love this
Kids will love the magical time-rewinding device and Peter's humorous attempts to fix his embarrassing mistakes.