Everything changes the moment an abandoned teenage boy agrees to guard a beautiful moon spirit girl’s magic orb and is dragged into a tale of ancient evil spanning a thousand years.
Standing atop the rusty green dumpster behind his orphanage on the night of a full harvest moon, a lonely, abandoned teenage boy meets the beautiful, mysterious moon spirit girl who’s been haunting his dreams. When he reluctantly agrees to guard the magical Orb she’s fleeing with, the mischievous and powerful object turns his world upside down.
It leads him down a dangerous path filled with moon-worshipping cults, flying lizard warriors, devious shadow spirits, and the looming threat of an ancient goddess known as The Destroyer.
He ends up caught between the chance to finally have a family and trying to save the world, and during an epic quest to return the orb, he ultimately discovers that he must unravel the mysterious truth of his own past in order to save the future
Assessment:
Plot/Idea: Moon Spirit centers on Max Berger, a teenage boy who was struck by a taxi a year ago and suffers complete amnesia as a result. If his life wasn't already confusing, he must endure bullying at the orphanage and has recurring dreams about Sarina, a lovely moon spirit. Sarina not only turns out to be real, but needs his help protecting a mysterious orb. Before long, Max is dodging bullies that make the ones at Helpren Municipal Orphanage seem like kittens, swallowing orbs, and fighting off flying lizards. Adding to the complications, a loving-but-strict foster family wishes to make room for him. Max just might have a real home...if he survives.
Prose: Gracely's prose is detailed, evocative, and poetic.
Originality: Moon Spirit's clever hook makes it stand out, especially given the odd circumstances surrounding Max's complete amnesia, and the theme-within-a-theme (be careful what you wish for) isn't just ironic, but a valuable lesson. The author's worldbuilding is likewise impressive, introducing readers to Garook, Kalahandra, veptors, Jexter, moon spirits, shadow spirits, and a whole host of other strange beings.
Character/Execution: Max is brave and determined, despite his very real peril, and his innate goodness shines throughout the book. His foster siblings, Marta, Zoe, and Sam, are all very different people and the author does a fine job making them distinct individuals. They are, like Max, trying their best to survive and do good in a world they find alternately bewildering and dangerous.
Date Submitted: August 28, 2024
Gracely (author of the Misfit’s Magic series) skillfully mixes the real world with the mystical, portraying Max’s very normal struggles as a high school boy—with a penchant for mischief—alongside his attempts to manage the enigmatic Orb at the same time. He’s infinitely relatable, a strongly rooted character despite having amnesia from an earlier accident and no memory of who he is, and he wants nothing more than to find a family of his own. That wish eventually comes true for Max, when he’s paired with a new foster family overflowing with odd yet endearing siblings, but it puts him in a tight spot when it’s time to return the Orb to Sarina.
Thanks to Gracely’s brilliant imagery, readers will feel as if they are journeying alongside Max as he faces a dark force too terrifying for words and his own staggering role in an ancient mystery. His quest pulls in friends and family, and Gracely crafts each of his foster sibling’s quirks in a way that makes them a crucial player in this epic battle of good versus evil. Max ultimately wins that battle, and Gracely makes the road to get there as fun as it is suspenseful.
Takeaway: Teen boy and his new family help magical beings save the world.
Comparable Titles: Peter J. Woods’s Joey Finch series, E.G. Foley’s The Gryphon Chronicles.
Production grades
Cover: B+
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: B+