Amos the Amazing is the action-packed magical adventure of
twelve-year-old Amos. The adventure starts with the book cover where artist Adrián
Ibarra depicts an alternative, fictional world that visually interacts with the audience with the slightly hapless protagonist dressed in his bunny slippers
and a red bathrobe running along the rooftop.
Amos is a clever, curious, bullied child from the Solarpunk futuristic city of Chongqing,
China, who loves spicy foods. When the story opens, his curiosity
distracts him
without consideration of the consequences but his life turns upside
when consequences land his mother in the hospital from an allergic
reaction to his very spicy
ice cream. As a result, his busy father drops him off with his
grandparents for a week and the adventure begins
with plenty of love and hard work and his friends Thunder the cat and
Rufus the dog.
Amos has a vivid dream in which Thunder leads him to the
musty closet in his room, and he
discovers a hidden compartment holding a dusty old wooden trunk. Inside that box is a silver ring on a chain and an old robe. He slips them
on, looks at his reflection and sees his face change into an old, wrinkled person
as a dull ache fills his head. His eyes grow dark and murky and transform to
an amber glow. A voice says, “Be careful what you wish for…” The mouth of the
reflection bares razor-sharp teeth and releases a scream of agony before the
mirror shatters, leaving behind an emptiness. Amos awakens with a shadowy
figure standing over him until Thunder hops onto him. Fearful images course through
his mind until he hears Grandma calling him for dinner.
Amos’s decisions impact his growth as a character. When
grandma expects him to feed the rabbits, chickens, and goats, instead of doing things the proper way, he tries to carry
all the bowls of feed and hay at one time to get the job over with. The
food slips from his hands and scatters across the floor. He leads the chickens into the house to clean up the
mess and feed them at the same time but it turns into a disaster, and Grandma tasks him with making
things right. He cleans the mess on his hands and knees and returns to his room
angry, crying, and feeling like nothing is good enough for Grandma.
He wishes he had magick to get the work done, thinks
about the trunk in his dreams, and searches the closet. To his surprise, he finds the box. Within it
he discovers a cloak, a chain holding a pendant and ring, and a folded piece of paper
that he slips into his pocket. He puts the items on and enters a dreamlike
experience with Thunder at his side. His necklace hums with energy. Green fog creeps
along the forest floor, and Thunder takes off. A slinky, nine-tailed red fox
snuggles beside Amos, wraps his nine tails around him, licks a tear from his
face, and rubs up against the pendant. His jaws open wide, and he swallows
Amos’s head. The boy wakes in
his bed back at Grandma’s but feels unwell. Whispers between
Grandma and the Doctor tell him something is wrong with him, plus Grandpa is
injured and maybe poisoned. He has lost half of his soul
to the trickster fox, and if he doesn’t do something, Grandpa will die.
With the help of Thunder, Amos finds the magick door at Anju
Ancient Town and enters a different realm—a zany world. Just think Wizard of
Oz meets Alice Through the Looking Glass with fae, gnomes, wizards, trolls,
and unnatural, steampunk clockwork creatures!
As much as his new surroundings and circumstances
distract Amos, he has a goal to get his soul back and find the cure
for Grandpa. One wrinkle in his plan is that because he only has half a soul, he
occupies another body for most of this adventure, and that body belongs to Fis, a
Paladin of the Summer Queen and a seventeen-year-old female. This coexistence
opens the door for plenty of conflict, humor, and growth, which Jorah Kai
accomplishes with panache!
Questions flood Amos’s mind at every turn. He takes them
on fearlessly and with determination, but his path isn’t as easy as following a
yellow brick road because even in this wacky land, Amos makes mistakes and experiences consequences.
My thoughts on Amos the Amazing
In this coming-of-age story, Amos grows to think of others
more as he runs a race to save his soul and his grandfather’s life. While this
book falls into the YA (Young Adult) category, I think it carries appeal for
readers of all ages. Amos the Amazing
is highly imaginative and action-packed with well-choreographed fight scenes. I highly recommend this book to readers
of all ages who enjoy books like Harry Potter or the Percy Jackson series. If
you are ready for adventure and enjoy exploring new fantastical worlds safely
from home, this one is for you. I give it a hearty 5 stars! At the writing of this review, Amos the Amazing is available for preorder on Goodreads and Amazon, and is slated for release on Oct. 31.
As BookHookup, I am a longtime book reviewer, and I received
Amos the Amazing as a free review copy and have not been compensated for
reviewing or recommending it. Some links in this post are affiliate links. We are a
participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate
advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking
to amazon.com and affiliate sites.
About the Author Jorah Kai
“We don’t rise to the level of our expectations (dreams), we fall to the level of our training.” ― Archilochus
Someone once told Jorah Kai to write what he knew, but since he was 12
and knew very little, the avid reader set off on a lifelong journey to
master a variety of esoteric subjects. He’s been a lifelong student,
martial artist, musician, English teacher, writer, newspaper columnist,
editor, web designer, dance music producer and touring DJ, black rock
city existential detective and philosopher, fire-breathing gypsy circus
performer, standup comedian, and family man; which offered many profound
insights into the human condition before uprooting his life and moving
to a city of 34 million people halfway across the planet.
Jorah Kai has been an English teacher in Chongqing, China, since 2014
and editor for iChongqing, an English news desk for the 34
million-person cyberpunk metropolis, since 2018. He was the first
Canadian journalist to report on the early Chinese outbreak and lockdown
in 2020 and wrote a syndicated diary column for Chinese and Canadian
(CTV News) audiences which was expanded and published in 2020 as his
first novel, the epistolary tale ‘The Invisible War’ (Kai’s Diary) by
Chinese New World Press in English and Chinese, which became an Amazon
Bestseller for China Books and then Canadian press Royal Collins in
English for a second edition. Both the column and book were celebrated
as providing critical health information and guidance during an
emergency. It was designated by the foreign affairs office as one of the
top 10 foreign language books and 25 overall notable books published in
China in 2020.
Kai enjoys conversing in foreign
languages because it’s more mysterious, and he enjoys playing guitar and
eating pizza as much as he hopes you love his books. He lives at the
confluence of two mighty rivers, the Yangtze and the Jialing, with a
large and loving family for many years as a human being and then forever
after as the most immortal of all supernatural beasts, a writer.