On a field trip, to Manitoba's legislative building (which Middlegate residents know as the Palace of the Blazing Star) they see fish everywhere in the architecture's many mythological and magic references. Even though they hear rumors of terrorist threats on the building, they both forget Catfysh's warning until the spring thaw. When she reappears and changes them into fish by magic, Wil and Sophie realize she is the spirit of the river and her help is needed if they wish to stop the Serpent's Chain from taking over the Palace of the Blazing Star.
This is the third Middlegate book (after The Serpent's Spell and Amber Ambrosia) and I can see a real growth in Ms. Bridgman's writing. There's a tightness to the plot that makes me feel no detail is incidental and will eventually tie into something later in the series. And it's these little details that add so much to the book-- Aunt Violet setting up shop as a fortune teller, Aunt Rue in line for a promotion, even the odd German woman they encounter on their field trip. I only wish more of the mysteries were explained-- we learn nothing more about the Serpent's Chain or their motives. Nor do we learn anything more about Wil's or Sophie's parents and Wil's medallion.
My Recommendation
If you haven't read the other Middlegate books, you should definitely start with The Serpent's Spell and Amber Ambrosia or you may be a bit lost. This is an excellent addition to the series, despite my wish for more information about the more mysterious elements of Middlegate.
Amber Ambrosia by Rae Bridgman
Published by Great Plain Publications
176 pages
Fish and Sphinx by Rae Bridgman is available at Amazon.com
The author provided me with a free review copy of Fish and Sphinx