Author picture

Gwyneth Rees

Author of Fairy Dust

43 Works 1,027 Members 6 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the name: Gwyneth Rees

Series

Works by Gwyneth Rees

Fairy Dust (2003) 114 copies
Mermaid Magic (2001) 91 copies
Fairy Treasure (2004) 81 copies, 1 review
Fairy Dreams (2005) 65 copies
Fairy Gold (2006) 54 copies
The Mum Hunt (2003) 52 copies
Cosmo and the Magic Sneeze (2005) 50 copies, 1 review
My Mum's from Planet Pluto (2004) 44 copies
Fairy Rescue (2007) 43 copies, 1 review
Fairy Secrets (2008) 32 copies
The Making of May (2006) 31 copies
The Mum Detective (2005) 30 copies
The Mum Surprise (2006) 30 copies, 1 review
Cosmo and the Secret Spell (2008) 30 copies
My Super Sister (2012) 26 copies
The Mum Mystery (2007) 22 copies
The Twinkling Tutu (2011) 21 copies
Something Secret (1995) 15 copies
Cosmo's Book of Spooky Fun (2007) 13 copies
Rani's Sea Spell (2001) 12 copies
The Shell Princess (2001) 10 copies
Earth to Daniel (2016) 8 copies
The Butterfly Tiara (2012) 8 copies
More Magical Fairy Fun (2008) 6 copies
The Honeymoon Sisters (2016) 5 copies
Mermaid Magic 5 copies
Fairy Secrets 5 copies, 1 review
Cherry Blossom Dreams (2015) 4 copies, 1 review
Libby In The Middle (2017) 4 copies
Fairy Rescue 4 copies
Super Cats (2019) 3 copies
Super Cats v Maximus Fang (2020) 2 copies
Super Cats v Dr Specs (2020) 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Gender
female

Members

Reviews

6 reviews
I had been in a bit of a reading and reviewing funk so when this turned up in the mail I couldn’t believe it. Publishers still wanted to send me books to review? Even when I hadn’t posted anything in ages? I wondered if Bloomsbury had made a mistake, but as I was at the end of Brisingr (by Christopher Paolini – yeah I’m still going with my Inheritance Cycle Series Binge Read) I put this one at the top of my pile. And then I read it in a weekend. So proud of myself! And here is the show more expected review…

As you can see it wasn’t the wonderful book ideal for getting me back into reading that I wanted. But I was determined to get through it so I did. Cherry Blossom Dreams tells the story of Sasha, who, at almost thirteen, is learning how life gets more difficult the older that you get. She has two best friends that don’t get along with each other, a crush on her friend Lily’s older brother, her mum is dating her teacher and she can’t tell anyone, and then there is Blossom House – a secret Sasha and her twin brother have been keeping as their own secret hideaway.

I wonder if part of the reason I didn’t connect with this novel is because at 21 I’m pretty far out of the target age. But I was that age once and I can still appreciate good children’s lit. But I didn’t really enjoy this. There was a lot of explaining and telling and long tangents that felt unnecessary – the whole way through the novel I felt like a twelve year old was rambling straight into my brain without pause and it was not a pleasant experience. She just didn’t stop talking and I found it very difficult to even care about her longwinded family history or her friendship dilemma (which was one of those super obvious ones) or her silly crush on her friend’s brother. The only thing that seemed interesting was the house itself, but the supposed magic about it went out of it when the secret was revealed – only it seemed to go straight over the heads of both Sasha and Sean who had no idea of the gravity of what was uncovered and couldn’t work out why it had made the adults in their lives so upset. And yet we were supposed to believe that Sasha was so mature for her age because their mother had been emotionally distant? I didn’t buy it.

There is not a great deal more to say about this book, but someone else closer to the target age range might enjoy this more than I did. It does have mystery and secrets and friendship issues and other things that may be relevant to kids that age, even possibly myself ten years ago. Unfortunately I didn’t enjoy this much.
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I first got the book from the book fair but the pages were all jumbled up. The publisher’s quickly replaced it and I was up all night reading.

It’s about a cat that helps his dad and his mistress make potions he doesn’t like her and when something mysterious is happening he is quick to get to the bottom of it.

I really enjoyed it an I recommend it to children.
½
It was a good book it could have been a better book but it was good and interesting.
½

Awards

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Associated Authors

Annabel Hudson Illustrator

Statistics

Works
43
Members
1,027
Popularity
#25,074
Rating
½ 3.5
Reviews
6
ISBNs
283
Languages
5

Charts & Graphs