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Gateway to Magic Kindle Edition
THIS IS AN ADVENTURE HE CAN’T CONTROL.
Steven Topcliff loves gaming but doesn’t believe in fairies or magic – until tricky cousin Tracy drags him away from his game console and gets him to press a red button on a mysterious stone they find in the local park. The stone turns out to be a one-way gateway to Fairyland, where nature rules supreme and technology is banned by law.
Lost without his video games, Steven struggles to survive in this scary new world. The inhabitants are dangerous, sometimes deadly. The Land itself is a living being that deals out instant magical punishments to lawbreakers. And the truth about Tracy is terrible indeed. Homesick and horrified, Steven is desperate to escape.
Ignorant of the rules, it’s not long before he breaks them and ends up in the custody of the ruthless Fairy Queen. He learns she’s the living power behind the Land and its creatures, and she has no intention of setting him free. He also suspects she’s not telling him her true reason for keeping him prisoner.
Whatever her game is, Steven isn’t about to play it her way.
His only chance of escape is to magic his own gateway home, so he attempts to build up some psychic muscle. The Queen uses all her guile to distract and torment him, and he lives in dread of being eaten alive by gruesome snake-like monsters that live in her garden; but the biggest block to his concentration is his own lack of faith. He still doesn’t believe it’s possible for a human being to do magic.
Can he believe in himself enough to forge the new gateway? And can he rely on the few friends he’s made to help him outwit the Queen?
- Reading age7 - 11 years
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateJanuary 20, 2013
Editorial Reviews
Review
Product details
- ASIN : B00B3T3QGW
- Publisher : Pearlswood Publishing
- Accessibility : Learn more
- Publication date : January 20, 2013
- Edition : 4th
- Language : English
- File size : 1.6 MB
- Simultaneous device usage : Unlimited
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 316 pages
- Page Flip : Enabled
- Reading age : 7 - 11 years
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Annabelle Franklin is the author of The Astral Gatecrashers and The Great Vegetable Invasion, the first two books in her Bad Boy Wizard series of paranormal comedies for children. She has also published two standalone novels for children, Gateway to Magic and The Slapstyx. Her short story Mercy Dog appears in award-winning anthology Unforgotten: The Great War 1914-1918 (Accent Press). She is a member of Swansea and District Writers' Circle, and has short stories in two of their anthologies.
Annabelle lives on South Wales’s stunning and magical South Gower coast, sharing her chalet home with a delinquent whippet. She is currently working on subsequent books in the Bad Boy Wizard series.
Customer reviews
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book's plot engaging, with one noting how fiction is woven as fact. They also appreciate its readability, with one customer describing it as a fun read.
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Customers enjoy the plot of the book, with one noting how fiction is compellingly woven as fact, and another mentioning they love the ending.
"...Fiction is compellingly woven as fact (yes, I believe!) and Annabelle knows what makes children laugh...." Read more
"...Love the ending, but the bunny trail ending kills me!!!" Read more
"...Great descriptions and a wonderful plot. It is a fun read" Read more
Customers find the book readable, with one describing it as a fun children's book.
"A fun story for middle-grade readers about a spoiled boy, Steven, who has everything he could want...." Read more
"...Great descriptions and a wonderful plot. It is a fun read" Read more
"Good book!..." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on May 15, 2015Format: KindleVerified PurchaseThis story threw me back to Enid Blyton, but the snappy, witty dialogue gives a wink to adults reading it aloud. If I was still teaching, my young students and I would be settling down to this imaginative story in the classroom. Fiction is compellingly woven as fact (yes, I believe!) and Annabelle knows what makes children laugh. I particularly liked the bit about being the age you want to be, the Forest of Pointy Fingers and the ShapeWatchers Program.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 1, 2022Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseA fun story for middle-grade readers about a spoiled boy, Steven, who has everything he could want. Steven spends his time playing video games until one day he sees something unusual in his game that makes sense later. His cousin Tracy talks him into going into the forest and presses that red button that says Do Not Push. Steven ends up in Fairy Land, where everything differs from what he knows. This reminded me a bit of Dorothy trying to get home in the “Wizard of Oz” mixed with the whimsy of “Alice in Wonderland.” I loved the characters he ran into along his journey. My favorite was Nigel, the shapeshifter. Technology is banned in this new land of magic, which makes it hard for Steven to navigate. The food he eats has unusual side-effects, and he has some lessons to learn along the way. The Fairy Queen is supposed to give him the job he is required to do to earn his keep. She is another fun character, and I liked her realm, but he has some miles to travel to get there. I bought this to give to my granddaughter and I know she will enjoy this magical tale as much as I did.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 14, 2014Format: KindleVerified PurchaseWhen I started to read this, I thought it would be a weird book, but as I got into it I really started liking it. Love the ending, but the bunny trail ending kills me!!!
- Reviewed in the United States on February 28, 2013Format: KindleVerified PurchaseI am reading this book to my son and he really likes it. Great descriptions and a wonderful plot. It is a fun read
- Reviewed in the United States on June 7, 2016Format: PaperbackMain characters – Steven the human, Nigel the shapeshifter, The fairy Queen and Mr Fildew the Queens Dungeon master.
Places – Earth and Fairyland
What story is about – Steven get mad tricked into pushing back the button that will send him to fairyland by his cousin Tracy.
After spending some time there and getting tricked by nasty goblins and a mischievous shape shifter, Steven just wants to go home but can't find anyone to help him. After Steven steals cakes from the fairy market he ends up in the Forrest of pointy fingers to be punished.
He eventually gets out of it and becomes the fairy queens consultant hoping that she will send him home.
My Review – Even though this is a children's book I did enjoy reading it to my daughter.
The author has a really good imagination and I think a younger person would have been totally engrossed in the magical world of fairies and goblins.
My daughter loved the Sock worms and Fairy queen.
The characters and places are fun and certainly magical and even though Steven faces real danger he manages to get out of it.
It gives the advice through way of punishment that if you do something wrong you should work out why it is wrong, learn form it and change yourself so you don't do it again.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 13, 2016Format: KindleThe Gateway to Magic is a delightful fairy tale filled with secrecy and intrigue that is sure to delight young and old.
Steven is a young boy who loves playing video games. When his cousin, Tracy, tricks him into pressing a hidden red button found on a stone they discover in the forest, the gates to fairyland are flung open. Steven finds himself living inside a realm filled with goblins, shapeshifters, and other scary beings. Hang on kids; we’re in for a wild ride.
One of the first entities Steven meets is Nigel, the shapeshifter, who seems to change into different figures that he can’t seem to control. I got many laughs out of the unusual things he changed himself into. However, Nigel’s character has a role. He becomes a friend and confidant of Steven and is instrumental in helping him to find a way out of fairyland. Nigel was my favorite character. Steven treated him badly, and still the little shapeshifter remained loyal.
All Steven wants to do is return to his home. Being a human in fairyland is a foreign experience. Ridiculed and made fun of by the fairies and the rest of the elemental beings, Steven has a hard time coping. At one point, Steven is starving because he doesn’t have a job. He steals some sweets to eat, and the Fairy Queen relegates him to the Forest of Pointy Fingers where he must bear his punishment. The only way out is to face up to the error of his ways.
It is when Steven realizes that it was wrong to steal that he leaves the forest of Pointy Fingers and meets Mr. Fildew, the Queen’s Dungeon Master. He is an organic type of creature who suffers from the power of suggestion. Finally, Steven meets the Fairy Queen, and she makes him her consultant. The three characters, Steven, Nigel, and Mr. Fildew have lessons they must learn to proceed in their lives in their fantasy world and beyond.
I guess that’s what I enjoyed most about this tale. You could read it with your younger children, and it would prompt great discussions on values and deep thoughts about growing up. Annabelle Franklin is a children’s writer, and I believe she throws the proper elements in her fantasy novel to encourage imagination in all kids.
If you love fairy tales like I do, you will enjoy this sweet and imaginative tale. Take your time, and by all means, read it with your children. They will love it!
*I voluntarily reviewed a Reader’s Copy of this book*
My Rating:
Character Believability: 5
Flow and Pace: 4
Reader Engagement: 4
Reader Enrichment: 4
Reader Enjoyment: 4
Overall Rate: 4 out of 5 stars
Top reviews from other countries
- prolific readerReviewed in the United Kingdom on January 24, 2013
5.0 out of 5 stars A book that grows through perfect bedtime reading to "read it yourself"
Format: KindleVerified PurchaseThis is for all children who love gaming, and all the parents who never really grew up and are still entranced by the magic of the classic fairytales and the "other worlds" of Enid Blyton's Faraway Tree. Annabelle Franklin has the rare gift of being able to enter a child's mind. Stephen is a "hero" every boy and girl will identify with. His struggle against the absolute rule and authority of the Fairy Queen mesmerizing. And don't worry, boys will love this Fairy Queen - there's nothing girly or soft about her.
This is storytelling at its best. A book to read and re-read that will become a favourite in the tradition of the classics. I loved it, and as a "test pilot" for the books I buy my grandchildren I am one hundred per cent certain they will. I can't wait for their next bedtime.
- SteveJonesReviewed in the United Kingdom on January 24, 2013
4.0 out of 5 stars 'a really good story'
Format: KindleVerified PurchaseI would say the author, Annabel Franklin is not mad on computer games, but she does know about them. She puts this knowledge to use by giving the notion of immersive gaming a whole new spin. The `hero' Steven Topcliffe becomes so immersed in his console shooter that he finds himself inside the game unable to escape, at least not without learning a whole new set of rules. One of his anguished discoveries is that the normal logic of gaming, the availability of power-ups, option to save the game and restart etc., doesn't apply if his nemesis, a mischievous dwarf decides it doesn't. My nephew, aged ten, and an avid gamer pointed out that this wasn't fair. This didn't stop him monopolising his mother's Kindle for two days while he read it and pronouncing it 'a really good story'. It also prompted a nice discussion on the differences between real life, which doesn't have incidental music, power-ups, and a save game facility, and video games. We eventually decided video games were not fair and incidental music in real life would be very helpful.
- Robert ShawReviewed in the United Kingdom on January 26, 2013
5.0 out of 5 stars Valuable Childrens Literature & GOOD FUN
Format: KindleVerified PurchaseAs an English teacher to younger learners I will certainly be able to make use of this wonderful book in class. Its very imaginative and fun for the teacher too. Beautifully and funnily written by a great author, thank you Annabelle and good luck.
- Fiona RileyReviewed in the United Kingdom on February 26, 2013
5.0 out of 5 stars Truly a Gateway to Magic
Format: KindleVerified PurchaseThis is a great book for children and adults alike and kept me turning my virtual pages. Really well written and entertaining. Loved it.