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Kathryn Littlewood

Author of Bliss

13 Works 929 Members 21 Reviews

About the Author

Image credit: babelio.com

Series

Works by Kathryn Littlewood

Bliss (2012) 507 copies, 15 reviews
A Dash of Magic (2013) 207 copies, 4 reviews
Bite-Sized Magic (2014) 133 copies, 2 reviews
Die Magische Rettung (2016) 22 copies
Die magische Verwandlung (2015) 19 copies
Das magische Fest (2018) 12 copies
Die Magische Zeit (2017) 9 copies
Die magische Schule (2019) 9 copies
Die magischen Zwillinge (2020) 6 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Gender
female
Nationality
USA

Members

Reviews

26 reviews
Rosemary Bliss and her family have a chance to get their family's magic cookbook back from Aunt Lily. In disguise, Rosemary and her brother Thyme sneak into a taping of Aunt Lily's cooking show and challenge her to a cookoff, winner takes the Booke. So Rose, Ty, Leigh, Sage, their parents, and a surprise family member head to Paris to compete. But Aunt Lily's cheating, giving her "special ingredient" to everyone so every dish baked will cause anyone who eats it to love Lily. Rose and her show more family, with the help of a talking cat, a French mouse, and other new Parisian friends have to find the secret magic ingredients, keep out of the way of Lily's henchman, and bake the most wonderful desserts in all of Paris.

I adore the Bliss Bakery books. Each member of the family has their own talents and skills and everyone gets a chance to contribute. The magical ingredients are cute and challenging to acquire. These books are really cute. I think they'd be great for a family read-a-long.
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Rosemary Bliss’ greatest desire is to learn the family business: baking magical recipes. The Bliss family’s bakery is unlike any other thanks to their enchanted goodies that can help bring lost loves together or put a stop to a flu outbreak.

When Rosemary’s parents are needed in a neighboring town, Rosemary is entrusted with the whisk-shaped key that protects the Bliss family Cookery Book. However, Rose and her two brothers are under strict orders to not bake anything from the Cookery show more Book.

When their long-lost “Aunt” Lily turns up unexpectedly, she brings with her some of her own recipes and instills in the Bliss children the desire to prove to her that they can whip up a little magic of their own. After all, how much trouble can some love muffins and truth cookies really cause in a small town like theirs?

This was a cute middle-grade novel, and it was a nice break from some of the more serious novels I read in 2018.

Rosemary is your average teenage girl who just wants her parents to take her seriously. She wants to prove to her parents that she is responsible enough to learn the secrets of their trade. The Bliss family bakery and home are connected, making the baking business an always present part of their lives.

The character of Aunt Lily is extremely questionable from the very beginning. The fact that the Bliss children have never met her and only have a vague memory of their mother talking to someone named Lily in the past makes one question why she is there and who she truly is.

When Rose and her brothers decide to dabble with the family’s magical recipes, things go incredibly wrong. The more the Bliss family children try to fix the problem, the more it compounds. Before long the entire town is suffering from one thing or another.

I would give this novel four out of five stars and would recommend it to fans of magical fiction novels.

I bought this book from Bookoutlet.com and the image above is my own.

stephanietiner.webador.com
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From the book jacket: Rosemary Bliss’s family has a secret. It’s the Bliss Cookery Booke – an ancient leather-bound volume of enchanted recipes like Singing Gingersnaps. Rose and her siblings are supposed to keep the Cookery Booke under lock and key while their parents are out of town, but then a m mysterious stranger shows up. “Aunt” Lily rides a motorcycle, wears purple sequins, and whips up exotic dishes for dinner.

My reactions
Okay, I knew it was a children’s middle-grade show more book, and I knew it involved magic. But still … this was just so awful I don’t even need some Cookies of Truth to write this review.

Rose is only eleven, but she is so unsure of herself, so certain she isn’t pretty or clever or (insert positive attribute here), and she bemoans her lack of looks, brains, etc on practically every page! Given her lack of confidence, it’s no wonder that she’s quickly seduced by Aunt Lily’s glamour and flattery. This, of course, makes me wonder why her parents would entrust the key to the special cabinet to Rose – or any of the children, for that matter. Why not just lock it up and take the key with them? Clearly, I’m not the intended audience, but I can’t imagine my nieces and nephews enjoying this either.

Still, I admit that some of the unintended results of their experiments were entertaining. So I’ll give it 2 stars.
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I didn't realize this was a middle grade reader when I downloaded it; but it is cute. I think I forget most middle grade books are full of overly exaggerated emotion (just like middle grade kids high on their first flush of puberty hormone). This is the first of a trilogy about a family with magical baking abilities...and their magical recipe book.

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Associated Authors

Eva Riekert Translator
Caroline Bruce Translator

Statistics

Works
13
Members
929
Popularity
#27,632
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
21
ISBNs
100
Languages
12

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