Solimar: The Sword of the Monarchs

by Pam Munoz Ryan

Paperback, 2023

Status

Available

Genres

Publication

Disney Hyperion (2023), 208 pages

Description

On the eve of her Quincea�era, Princess Solimar discovers that it will take more than magic to save her kingdom and prevent the destruction of the Monarch butterfly.

Rating

(8 ratings; 3.4)

User reviews

LibraryThing member jennybeast
I wanted to love this, but found it slow going to start with. Once the action started, it really pulls you along, but it takes a while to get there. I am reviewing an arc, so it may well improve before publication. Huge points for creativity in some senses — loved the quirky magical power, the
Show More
importance of protecting the monarch butterflies and the forest, the mile a minute raft adventure. I’m not really into princesses, so that didn’t do anything for me, but I suspect it will go over very well with the intended audience. I am really glad to see fantasy with a strong Latinx girl character at the center.

Advanced Readers Copy provided by edelweiss
Show Less
LibraryThing member sweetiegherkin
Solimar, a mestiza princess in an olden Mexico kingdom, breaks the rules one day and crosses the creek to visit the migrating monarch butterflies, who bestow a gift of a magic upon her. Soliimar thinks she has enough troubles trying to negotiate this new power, but there's also trouble brewing with
Show More
a neighboring kingdom that could lead to far worse consequences ...

This book has a beautiful cover and the author is an appeal with her numerous accolades for previous titles. I loved the idea of monarchs containing magic and really enjoyed that plotline as Solimar discovers the boundaries of what this means for her and others around her. The message of protecting nature and endangered species is there but without being overly didactic.

At one point, I thought to myself that this felt a bit like a Disney movie, with a teenaged princess (who has all the familial loyalty and innocence of a child and none of the snark of an actual teenager) and her faithful pet companion on the cusp of her coronation. A little after that I flipped back to the publication page and saw that it is a Disney property. That being said, Pam Munoz Ryan still writes with all her usual beauty, so this isn't the rubbish of a Disney movie plot poorly converted into a novel. However, it does bear some elements of a typical Disney story as the young princess is separated from her parents and must save the day with the help of a plucky, impoverished boy around her age.

Still, it was an enjoyable read overall. I did feel, however, that the climactic ending glossed over some key details. We're in the middle of a scene basically and then it skips to three days later, which was odd to me. I wish a little more had been explained here.

Besides the key message about environmentalism, there's also a minor subplot about Solimar wanting the kingdom to be more democratic and contain the council of both men and women. It's not much, but at least it's something.
Show Less

Awards

Texas Bluebonnet Award (Nominee — 2024)
Sunshine State Young Reader's Award (Nominee — Grades 3-5 — 2024)
Green Earth Book Award (Recommended Reading — Children's Fiction — 2023)

Language

Original language

English

Physical description

208 p.; 7.6 inches

ISBN

1368078443 / 9781368078443
Page: 0.4055 seconds