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Sharon Rentta

Author of The Abominables

19+ Works 441 Members 10 Reviews

Works by Sharon Rentta

Associated Works

One Dog and His Boy (2011) — Illustrator, some editions — 354 copies
Merlin: The Homeless Foal (2007) — Illustrator — 62 copies
Holly: The Doorstep Puppy (2008) — Illustrator — 61 copies
The Chocolate Dog (2012) — Illustrator — 28 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Occupations
illustrator

Members

Reviews

What a great last book! Ibbotson at her best. I had a good laugh at almost every single page. I got this book in a giveaway, and I feel like a lucky winner. I don't think the children for whom the book is written will understand every single one of the allusions to environmental politics, the "reincarnation" of Lady Agatha, etc., but they will definitely have fun and learn inthe process. I am going to put the book in the school library where I work.
 
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Marietje.Halbertsma | 6 other reviews | Jan 9, 2022 |
I have yet to read a book by Eva Ibbotson that I enjoy. Is it me? It must be me. This book started out great. The narration was fun and quirky. The premise was totally implausible, but I was taken with Agatha and her band of Yetis right from the start.

Agatha, while vacationing in the Himalayas, is kidnapped by a yeti. Instead of freaking out, like I would do, she falls in love with the yeti's children and decides to stay and be their mother. This part of the story is heaven for me. Cute. Fun. Everything I want in a book. Then one of the yeti kids leaves tracks in the snow, which leads to a boy named Con finding them. Agatha decides they are no longer safe from tourists and she elicits Con's help to get them to her home in England. She can’t go because she is too old. Without Agatha the story loses its way. The narration isn't quite as interesting. The details are a bit lacking. In short, it gets boring.

If only the yetis had stayed put…
… (more)
 
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valorrmac | 6 other reviews | Sep 21, 2018 |
A sweet story about sweet yetis brought up by the young daughter of a Victorian botanist who was collecting rare plants in the Himalayas. Lady Agatha taught them to be well-mannered and thoughtful. It paid off when, fleeing tourists, they had an adventurous journey from the Himalayas to her manor home in England. Did you know the reason a yeti hasn't been discovered is because their feet are on backwards? Their footsteps take the tracker in the opposite direction.
½
 
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VivienneR | 6 other reviews | Oct 11, 2015 |
Eva Ibbotson, with her idiosyncratic style of humor, centers her story The Abominables around a family of abominable snowmen--trained in English manners--who migrate to England, while hiding in a refrigerated truck. That's your plot synopsis. Let your imagination run wild--Eva will surprise you. Highly entertaining for all ages, but only if you have a sense of humor.
 
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jjvors | 6 other reviews | Apr 15, 2015 |

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Statistics

Works
19
Also by
4
Members
441
Popularity
#55,516
Rating
4.0
Reviews
10
ISBNs
87
Languages
10

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