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Robin Jarvis (1) (1963–)

Author of The Dark Portal

For other authors named Robin Jarvis, see the disambiguation page.

35+ Works 3,503 Members 36 Reviews 5 Favorited

About the Author

Robin Jarvis was born in Liverpool, England on May 8, 1963. He studied graphic design at Newcastle Polytechnic. After college, he worked in the television and advertising industries as a model-maker. He started writing in 1988. He writes numerous series including The Deptford Mice, Deptford show more Histories, Whitby, Tales from the Wyrd Museum, Hagwood, Intrigues of the Reflected Realm, Mouselets of Deptford, and Dancing Jax. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Series

Works by Robin Jarvis

The Dark Portal (1989) 575 copies, 6 reviews
The Crystal Prison (1989) 385 copies, 1 review
The Woven Path (1995) 320 copies, 3 reviews
The Alchymist's Cat (1991) 279 copies, 3 reviews
The Final Reckoning (1990) 277 copies, 1 review
The Whitby Witches (1991) 244 copies, 5 reviews
The Raven's Knot (1996) 214 copies
The Oaken Throne (1993) 152 copies, 1 review
Thorn Ogres of Hagwood (1999) 146 copies
The Fatal Strand (1998) 143 copies, 1 review
Dancing Jax (2011) 130 copies, 6 reviews
A Warlock in Whitby (1992) 106 copies, 1 review
Thomas (1995) 102 copies, 2 reviews
Deathscent (2001) 96 copies, 1 review
The Whitby Child (1994) 92 copies, 1 review
Freax and Rejex (2012) 54 copies, 1 review
Fighting Pax (2013) 29 copies, 1 review
The Power of Dark (2016) 29 copies, 1 review
Fleabee's Fortune (2004) 21 copies
The Deptford Mice Almanack (1997) 19 copies
Dark Waters of Hagwood (2013) 16 copies
The Devil's Paintbox (2017) 15 copies, 1 review
War in Hagwood (2016) 15 copies
The Deptford Mice Trilogy (1994) 12 copies
Whitby Witches (2021) 9 copies
Whortle's Hope (2007) 7 copies
The Whitby Boxed Set (1995) 4 copies
Ogmund's Gift (2018) 2 copies

Associated Works

Haunted: Ghost Stories to Chill Your Blood (2011) — Contributor — 38 copies, 1 review

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Reviews

39 reviews
I would like to thank Egmont Publishing for providing me with an advanced reading copy of this book.

The Devil's Paintbox is the second book in The Witching Legacy trilogy by Robin Jarvis. I previously read the first book The Power of the Dark back in March 2016 and really enjoyed it, but I have to say, I enjoyed the second book much more than the first.

It's been a year since I read the first book and I was surprised by how easily I slipped back into Lil and Verne's world. The writing was show more wonderfully vivid. The plot was engaging, fast-paced and action packed from beginning to end. It sets the imagination on fire and I could easily see everything clearly in my mind's eye as I read.

The Devil's Paintbox is full of colour, adventure, magic, and imagination, but at the same time it's dark, ominous, and creates a feeling of foreboding. This is the kind of book I would have loved to have read as a child, under the covers with a torch. I could almost feel the excitement and anticipation that young me would have felt, along with the need to turn the pages whilst being apprehensive about what's to come.

Definitely one I would recommend. I didn't want to put the book down, it was a lot of fun and I read it in one sitting. My niece and the kids in my reading group are going to love it.
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I would probably have enjoyed this book if I hadn't read it at the end of reading through all 6 Deptford Mice books. As it was, I found it a slightly tired rehashing of things we had seen done better in earlier books. The simpleton is a Dark Agent in disguise? That was done better in the Oaken Throne. The enemy is a dark god trying to rise again? We'd just had that in the Oaken Throne, and in The Final Reckoning... A town mouse stays with some field mice and causes a doomed love triangle? show more Wasn't that the plot of the Crystal Prison? It is fun watching Robin Javis weive foreign animals into his traditionally English stories, but I was mostly wanting it to be half the length it was. show less
If Stephen King were to write a book for young adults then I would imagine it would be something very much like Dancing Jax. Although Robin Jarvis suggests that he doesn't see himself as a horror author, this book is as chilling as anything the great King has published. Reading it certainly made me feel the same as I did when I first read 'Salem's Lot, which was very nervous indeed. I don't scare easily these days, and I totally love horror films, but both of these stories had me feeling on show more edge pretty much from the first chapter.

I have now been sitting staring at my screen for an hour trying to come up with words that describe this book. The blurb at the top of this post says a lot about the plot, and I feel that saying much more could not so much create spoilers, but in some way diminish reading enjoyment anyway. I think this is because the plot seems unique to me; I certainly don't think that I have come across anything similar in YA literature before. The beginning of the story suggests a fairly standard horror story of ghostly/demonic possession, but Robin Jarvis very quickly dispels any thoughts that his story will be as straightforward as this. And I'm still struggling to work out the best way to describe it. To call it a horror story would, I feel, do it an injustice as it is so much more than that. Similarly, to call it fantasy does not feel right. It is a brilliant hybrid of all the best elements of horror, fantasy, fairy tales, folk lore and even social commentary, and somehow Robin Jarvis has blended all of these ingredients as if he were a master chef cooking a perfect five course meal for a panel of the world's most hard-to-please food critics.

The story revolves around a book, the (almost) titular Dancing Jacks; a book created by a truly evil man - the supposedly long missing and presumed dead Austerly Fellows. This book has the power to 'convert' anybody who reads it into a devotee of the Ismus, but not in the brainwashed cult way that we see occasionally in the media today. These converts start to believe in another world, where the Ismus is lord and master, and each new follower has a specific role to play, based upon a deck of playing cards. Therefore, we have the likes of the Jack of Diamonds, the Jill of Clubs, the Queen of Spades as main characters in this fantasy world, and the lower numbers become serfs with menial tasks. And they genuinely all believe that this world exists, thanks to the malevolent magic that permeates from the book, corrupting all who read or hear its story.

I think the element I found most disturbing is that the first people who are targeted by the Ismus are the children of the secondary school on the fringes of Felixstowe. Like a clever drug dealer, the Ismus gets the book into the hands of a few and this very quickly snowballs, with 'addict' after 'addict' falling under the spell of the evil book. And before too long, so are the adults. Maybe I'm just being overly sensitive as I spend a big part of my life encouraging young people to read, and yet in Dancing Jax it is this very activity that becomes their downfall. How disturbing is that? And possibly slightly unnerving is the fact that Robin Jarvis's Dancing Jax is almost as addictive as its fictional namesake - I just did not want to stop reading it and found myself reading well into the night, and then rushing home very tired from work the next day to get it finished off.

Going back to my earlier assertion that this work is similar to that of Stephen King, I think I feel this way because of the way in which Robin Jarvis builds his story. Like King, he focuses on the minutiae of the day-to-day lives of the people of this part of Felixstowe: their hopes and fears, the way they interact with each other on a daily basis, the way they deal with tragedy. In doing so we 'meet' a huge array of characters and therefore we really do not know who is going to be the hero of the story who will eventually thwart the plans of the villain. Just as I thought it would be one particular character the plot would twist, they would fall foul of the Book's magic and become another one of the ever growing legion of Ismus devotees. This also means that just as you get attached to and start rooting for a character your hopes are violently dashed and your character allegiance has to shift. I remember thinking exactly the same thoughts as I read 'Salem's Lot, as first one member of the town became a vampire, and then another, and another, although because of the way that book opens we always know that Ben Mears is likely to be a survivor.

As I was reading Dancing Jax I couldn't help but feel that at times Robin Jarvis was commenting on how our society has degraded over the last few decades. These thoughts were confirmed by one of my favourite passages in the book, which comes towards the end as the Ismus arrogantly justifies the magic of the book and his actions by preaching:

"There are no children in this world any more. You dress and treat them as mini-adults. You let little girls play with dolls that look like Berlin prostitutes. The morality and hypocrisy I used to find so stomach-churning no longer exists. You foist on to your young people role models whose brains are never as active as their underwear, and whose talents and achievements extend only as far as the bedroom door and the ability to blurt every detail of what happens behind it. You give your precious offspring access to a lightning-fast network of corruption and danger. You immerse them in computer games far more violent than the most savage and dirty war, and target prepubescents with inappropriate music and imagery - giving them a vocabulary that would have revolted sailors back in my day. There are not stigmas, no taboos, no boundaries, no respect and certainly no innocence left. To be pregnant at thirteen is no longer an everlasting shame, merely a career choice."

Perhaps the Ismus is correct, and Dancing Jacks is the only solution to today's social problems? Scary thought.
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This is a children's book? No wonder I can't remember actually reading the trilogy I received for Christmas when I was nine! The writing is simplistic in places, as to be expected in a story about mice versus rats, but also very wordy. I did enjoy the Borrowers type details about life in the abandoned house - how an old ventilation grille in the cellar is the portal to the rats' lair in the sewers - and I loved Jupiter and his evil plan to take down humanity! (Perfectly believable for a show more cat!) I only read this on Kindle Unlimited for the nostalgia kick and won't be going on with the rest of the trilogy, but thanks for the fun break! show less

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