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Original Title: The Rescuers
ISBN: 0316783552 (ISBN13: 9780316783552)
Edition Language: English
Series: The Rescuers #1
Characters: Miss Bianca, Bernard
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The Rescuers (The Rescuers #1) Paperback | Pages: 160 pages
Rating: 4.09 | 5141 Users | 213 Reviews

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Title:The Rescuers (The Rescuers #1)
Author:Margery Sharp
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:First Edition
Pages:Pages: 160 pages
Published:April 1st 1994 by Little Brown & Co. (first published 1959)
Categories:Childrens. Fantasy. Fiction. Animals. Classics. Adventure

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I remember seeing The Rescuers film en francais back when I was in the third grade, but it took me until now to read the book. Yeah, I know what you're thinking, why am I reading a kids' book? Well, when it comes to great stories, I think you can be any age to read them. This one, a classic by Margery Sharp (she also wrote Something Light, another of my favorites), tells the story of a group of mice who decide to risk their lives in order to save a child. It's a story similar to The Rats of NIMH or Felidae, one sort of dark but still with wonderful characters and a brilliant ending. :)

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Ratings: 4.09 From 5141 Users | 213 Reviews

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This was an amazing children's novel! I loved the movie adaptation; however, just like any adaptation, it is not always the same. There are similar characters and plot line but filled with adventure with Miss Bianca and Bernard.The main plot is Miss Bianca, Bernard, and Nils (a Norwegian mouse) is asked by the Prisoner's Aid Society to rescue an imprisoned poet. Do they succeed or not? Find out!

(3.5)Aside from some dated, sexist lines this was a really nice story. Short and sweet, and I kinda regret not pushing through and finishing this book the previous times I picked it up and shortly DNF-ed it. The adult part of me wonders why the unnamed poet was locked up to begin with, and if he's really someone who should be freed, but I'll trust in the innocence of children's books and assume he was wrongfully imprisoned.

I'd put off reading this book despite owning it for a while, due entirely to my dislike of the inexplicably popular Disney film that was allegedly based on this story. Imagine my surprise to find that it's a decent heist story featuring a group of mice attempting to break a Norwegian poet out of a high security (for the time) prison. The mice are actually somewhat engaging characters, and the backdrop of what is essentially a mouse MI6 freeing the unjustly imprisoned is an interesting idea.

Although I wasn't particularly keen to read this book (and its sequel) for my Year in Disney Movies project, I found myself pleasantly surprised.This is written in that perfect children's classic, read-aloud way -- except, unlike many middle-grade authors, Margery Sharp has the discipline not to headhop, instead breaking character perspectives into short sections within chapters. It inserts funny commentary or asides that add to an overall tone of warmth, dignity, and importance without ever

It's probably my fault for not doing my research, but I was expecting a novel of high-speed chases through swamps and a teddy bear with a diamond hidden in its stomach. Instead I got a group of mice breaking into a castle (what year is it?) to rescue a Norwegian poet. Hmmm...On top of it, Sharp is clearly deep in her own little world, but she is either a terrible writer or on drugs, because much of the book is incomprehensible, especially at the beginning.The illustrations were cute.



It's hard not to love Disney's representation of this novel. I mean, come on! Bernard and Miss Bianca are absolutely adorable and Madame Medusa is an absolute RIOT. With that fantastic representation in mind, this book was just alright. Disney did a fantastic job of taking something with "good bones" and turning it into something far more engaging and interesting. While I enjoyed the Mamelouk character and that exploration of Miss Bianca's cleverness, she was much more a damsel in distress in

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