Kirsty and Rachel are preparing for a midnight feast at Camp Stargaze, but everything's going wrong! Morgan the Midnight Fairy has lost her bag of magical night dust.The girls must find it before the midnight feast turns into a midnight flop!
Daisy Meadows is the pseudonym used for the four writers of the Rainbow Magic children's series: Narinder Dhami, Sue Bentley, Linda Chapman, and Sue Mongredien. Rainbow Magic features differing groups of fairies as main characters, including the Jewel fairies, Weather fairies, Pet fairies, Petal fairies, and Sporty fairies.
Narinder Dhami was born in Wolverhampton, England on November 15, 1958. She received a degree in English from Birmingham University in 1980. After having taught in primary and secondary schools for several years she began to write full-time. Dhami has published many retellings of popular Disney stories and wrote the Animal Stars and Babes series, the latter about young British girls of Asian origin. She lives in Cambridge, England with her husband and cats.
Sue Bentley was born in Northampton, England. She worked in a library after completing her education and began writing for children once her own began school. Bentley is the author of the Magic Kitten, Magic Puppy, and S Club series and lives in Northamptonshire.
Linda Chapman has written over 50 children's fiction books, including the following series: My Secret Unicorn, Stardust, Not Quite a Mermaid, and Unicorn School. She lives in Leicestershire with her husband and daughters.
Sue Mongredien was born in 1970 and grew up in Nottingham, England. She has published over 100 children's books, including the following series: The Adventures of Captain Pugwash, The Magic Key, Frightful Families, and Oliver Moon. She has also contributed many titles to the Sleepover Club series and written picture books. Mongredien created the Royal Ballet School Diaries under the pen name Alexandra Moss. She lives with her family in Bath, England.
Kirsty and Rachel are preparing for a midnight feast at Camp Stargaze, but everything's going wrong! Morgan the Midnight Fairy has lost her bag of magical night dust.The girls must find it before the midnight feast turns into a midnight flop!
-Morgan is adorable! I actually don’t love bows, but she makes it work so well! And I was curious as to what symbol they could use for her because midnight isn’t exactly a tangible object; the pocketwatch was a great choice, and I loved that added detail of it being set to midnight specifically. (I also think that the black cover in the US edition is a lot better than the UK one because Morgan really pops against that black cover.) -I was wondering what being the midnight fairy could possibly entail… I don’t know what I was expecting, but I’m a little disappointed nonetheless. I don’t hate the idea of midnight being all about fun and parties, I just think that it doesn’t really fit with the Night Fairies since their powers are so focused on the sky. -“Night Dust” oh Sue, you’re embarrassing me -Fairy Mention: Gabriella the Snow Kingdom Fairy -I need to know more about their magic dust. How is it refilled? Because given what Morgan said, it’s clearly not an infinite supply. -Ghost!Rachel is the cutest.
Daisy Meadows and her fairies are my childhood. I collected so many in my youth, knowing all the fairies and their importance, and sticking with the two special girls who go to be a part of the magic. Years ago I had to give my beautiful collection away, now still part of my childhood school where little girls are picking their favourite fairies and playing pretend. It's fun to hear stories from my old teachers telling me how over the years so many students have grabbed these books and fallen in love with the tales of two girls, Jack Frost and the fabulous glittering magic that is the fairies. On Christmas last year, my sister surprised me with a boxset of these books, but cause you cannot collect these darlings as easily anymore. I was over the moon! If anyone has a little one who needs a little magic in their life, wants to read and needs a big creation to be hooked on...it is Daisy Meadows!
This is the fourth book of seven in the Rainbow Magic Night Fairies series by the group of authors who go by the pseudonym Daisy Meadows. While the stories are basically the same and follow a simple formula, they are entertaining for young girls who are starting to read chapter books and I love that our oldest is just ripping through them. We both read the books separately and talk about what happens. I'm not a huge fan of them, but each story only takes about 5-10 minutes to read. And these stories center around the nighttime and a summer trip to camp, so it's perfect for summer reading. Our oldest is starting to read them very quickly, too, and she can read several of these stories in one day.
My favorite part was when they went to the midnight feast to roast marshmallows and the marshmallows were pink. Then Morgan the Midnight Fairy came and the goblins came and she helped Kirsty and Rachel make the goblins go down the hill. They tumbled down so they won't notice anything about the magic bag. They wanted to get the magic bag but they never did.
Bryan Feb 14, 2015 - I liked that Morgan, Kirsty and Rachel found Morgan's fairy dust. It was funny that Morgan turned Rachel into a goblin to tell the goblins a ghost story. And Morgan turned Kirsty into a ghost to scare the goblins and get the fairy dust back.
This book was about Kirsty and Rachel helping Morgan to get her night dust back from the goblins.I like this book because it's mysterious and little scary and has a festival setting.