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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The seventh and final book in the thrilling, suspenseful and masterfully told fantasy-adventure series.After she discovers the astonishing truth about her past, Dessa forms an unlikely alliance with Captain Drake against Greyfalcon, and they travel together to the royal city to rescue her twin brother, Jared, from Greyfalcon's evil clutches. But their plans go awry when they arrive to find Jared already on the throne! And it's nowhere near the joyful reunion you might expect—instead, Dessa is captured and thrown into the dungeon. It's clear her brother is in no position to come to her aid—can Dessa manage one more tricky escape? The action never quits, as amid the shocking revelations, twists and turns, the pieces of the puzzle fall into place. Finales don't get any better than this!

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    • Kirkus

      The headlong chase that began in Tower of Treasure (2010) ends in a climactic whirl of dramatic rescues, heated confrontations, and sudden reversals of fortune.The twists begin at the outset as one-time adversary Capt. Drake is fished from the sea and, having lost his sword arm in The Dark Island (2016), sets to training his former quarry Dessa in combat. With loyal blue sidekick Topper (the "Three Thieves" having been reduced to two by previous events) and other allies, Dessa then sets out to wrest her kidnapped brother, Jared, and the realm of North Huntington from the clutches of the treacherous chamberlain Greyfalcon--only to find her long-lost twin sitting on the throne. Even so, he cannot prevent Dessa from being seized by Greyfalcon...but wonderful surprises waiting for her down in the dungeons pave the way both to a family reunion and a climactic throne-room dust-up. Before that, though, Greyfalcon obligingly explains his back story, motives, and schemes at length in retrospective monochrome panels. Possibly with an eye to sequels Chantler consigns the bad guys to ambiguous fates, but he does wrap up the storyline in a tidy epilogue that carries Dessa and Jared into adulthood and bright, if well-telegraphed, careers. A multiracial pirate crew and a rescued set of kidnapped young royals provide diversity to an otherwise all-white (human) cast. A well-wrought, well-timed, and satisfying finale to this well-conceived series. (Graphic fantasy. 10-12) COPYRIGHT(1) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from October 15, 2016
      Grades 4-6 *Starred Review* Chantler's seven-part fantasy epic began as a fast-paced, high-spirited adventure of three thieves caught up in a royal conspiracy. Slowly, though, larger pieces started to fall into place, and lively characters developed formidable emotional heft. By book four, The King's Dragon (2014), the series had taken on unexpected weight and urgency.The final book of the Three Thieves brings it all to an exceptionally satisfying conclusion, with Dessa, her royal lineage now revealed, returning to North Huntington, having forged a partnership with its oldest enemy, and seeking to rescue her brother and recover the throne. Chantler continues to tap the emotional vein that has been the saga's quiet, invaluable strength, maturing Dessa into someone who can embrace her old opponents and her past mistakes. Familial revelations and confrontations resonate back through the entire series and exemplify the characters' internal journeys as much as tie up the plot, affording this conclusion a rich sense of closure. As always, Chantler's art balances the emotional turmoil with scrappy, freewheeling excitement, as in a humorous two-page sword-training session, an ingenious castle infiltration, and a final two-page spread that will fire up the wonder and delight of every young reader lucky enough to encounter this grand series.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2016, American Library Association.)

    • Kirkus

      August 1, 2016
      The headlong chase that began in Tower of Treasure (2010) ends in a climactic whirl of dramatic rescues, heated confrontations, and sudden reversals of fortune.The twists begin at the outset as one-time adversary Capt. Drake is fished from the sea and, having lost his sword arm in The Dark Island (2016), sets to training his former quarry Dessa in combat. With loyal blue sidekick Topper (the Three Thieves having been reduced to two by previous events) and other allies, Dessa then sets out to wrest her kidnapped brother, Jared, and the realm of North Huntington from the clutches of the treacherous chamberlain Greyfalcononly to find her long-lost twin sitting on the throne. Even so, he cannot prevent Dessa from being seized by Greyfalconbut wonderful surprises waiting for her down in the dungeons pave the way both to a family reunion and a climactic throne-room dust-up. Before that, though, Greyfalcon obligingly explains his back story, motives, and schemes at length in retrospective monochrome panels. Possibly with an eye to sequels Chantler consigns the bad guys to ambiguous fates, but he does wrap up the storyline in a tidy epilogue that carries Dessa and Jared into adulthood and bright, if well-telegraphed, careers. A multiracial pirate crew and a rescued set of kidnapped young royals provide diversity to an otherwise all-white (human) cast. A well-wrought, well-timed, and satisfying finale to this well-conceived series. (Graphic fantasy. 10-12)

      COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Formats

  • OverDrive Read
  • PDF ebook

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:3.5
  • Interest Level:K-3(LG)
  • Text Difficulty:2

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