Waterstones Rainbow Magic: Rae the Rollercoaster Fairy
15 ratings
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Price: £4.99
Brand: Waterstones
Description: Get ready for an exciting fairy adventure with the no. 1 bestselling series for girls aged 5 and up. Kirsty is so excited to visit Rachel for a weekend and even more excited to visit The Fernandos' Fabulous Funfair! But Jack Frost wants a funfair all to himself and he's stolen the Funfair Fairies magic keyring to make it happen. Can Kirsty and Rachel defeat him, before the funfair is totally wrecked! 'These stories are magic; they turn children into readers!' Reading Zone. Com Read all four fairy adventures in the Funfair Fairies set! Rae the Rollercoaster Fairy; Fatima the Face-Painting Fairy; Paloma the Dodgems Fairy; Bobbi the Bouncy Castle Fairy. If you like Rainbow Magic, check out Daisy Meadows' other series: Magic Animal Friends and Unicorn Magic!. Waterstones Rainbow Magic: Rae the Rollercoaster Fairy - shop the best deal online on thebookbug.co.uk
Category: Books
Merchant: Waterstones
Product ID: 9781408349632
Delivery cost: 2.99
ISBN: 9781408349632
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Author: Nell2505
Rating: 5
Review: Bought this book as a gift for someone who loves Rainbow Magic books AND rollercoasters - it was a great choice! I’m sure it will have been enjoyed several times over.
Author: Lilyfae
Rating: 4
Review: Ever the heroes, Kirsty and Rachel are visiting the funfair at Rachel's school field and something has gone wrong at the funfair, of course Jack Frost and his Goblins have been up to no good and it's up to Kirsty and Rachel to save fairyland and the funfair from being boring by returning magical key rings to the guardian fairies of the rides and games across this series of books. This book concerns Rae the Rollercoaster fairy, the Zippy Zoom Rollercoaster at the fair and involves gentle persuasion and somewhat bribery of the naughty goblins to choose to return the keyring. There's nothing scary per say unless you have exceptionally sensitive children- the goblins are more naughty/silly than wicked/scary (think putty patrol from the 90s power rangers) and there's no unkindness or rudeness/taunting from our good girls which is nice from the perspective of a parent! My 5 year old is at the point where she wants some longer books read to her and in some collaboration (she very much enjoys being read to) and we've been exploring chapter books, she really enjoyed this book and insisted it was read in entirety to her the first time. Of course she is very astute and after a few 'we need to return X things that Jack Frost and his goblins have stolen' type stories she will catch on, but til then this is exciting enough for her to pick up and peruse by herself to start trying to read snippets. I would say your child needs to be 'through' the phonics stage to interact with these books as they are short stories but require some fluency above the skills of an emergent reader. We have ordered some beginner and first readers for independent reading but these are ideal for confident readers (6-7ish and up) who haven't quite progressed to chapter books. Daisy Meadows is a collaborative of several authors which is why they can churn out so many of these by the formula books of Rachel, Kirsty and their culturally aware and fashionable fairy friends. It's not literature, and yes they are formulaic, repetitive in vocabulary and tedious for a well-read adult, but it can help literacy, these books are the childhood equivalent of chick-lit or macho-guys brain candy books, they encourage interaction with the written word, allows an equal measure of escapism through fairies and magic and security of the known through the familiar characters, plot and language. Let's be honest if they encourage any reading they are a great thing, if they are a stepping stone to better literature then they are awesome.