Kingdom Keepers VII: The Insider

ByRidley Pearson

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Readers` Reviews

★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
corky
I often read their books and think about Disney.It wasn't until I read the last book I realized since it was the last book I understood things I never knew about Disney.And for the lastbook it was great but did Chernabog die but I love the books
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
emily b
Have not been able to put this series down. Bought them all at once after my daughter had seen commercial for the newest release on Disney channel. The Keepers are funny, you actually learn tidbits about the characters, films, and parks you may not have known. I didn't what the basis for Chernabog was. The Villains are far more dangerous than you would think given they are from animated cartoons and are restricted by the animators. Being alive has really proved their nastiness. If you need to get away from all the Disney history and true-life books about Disney, this is a perfect getaway. And did I mention Chernabog is as nasty and bad as they come?
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
leanne curtis
This is probably the best book out of the series! The beginning is confusing but other than that these are the best books ever! I hate how it leaves you hanging at the end OMG! Cnt wait fir the new series Ridley says hes going to do with the keepers at imageneer school!
Kingdom Keepers III: Disney in Shadow :: Kingdom Keepers IV: Power Play :: Kingdom Keepers V: Shell Game :: Kingdom Keepers VI: Dark Passage :: 2013 Edition (College Admissions Guides) - Paying for College Without Going Broke
★ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆
agatha donkar
Not even worth my time to review. Shallow, meandering, hollow. Disappointing, frustrating, annoying. I'm so bugged at the blatant lack of writing effort that I don't even feel like giving the time it would take to properly write the reasons why. I didn't love this series to begin with. This book didn't help. Good riddance.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
jennifer england
My 7th grade grand girl LOVE's this series....winner. She is an 9-10 grade level reader but she reads these for
fun, not a book report.. It is difficult to get books past her CONSERVATIVE mother and boy/girl stories won't get past front door inspections.
These suit my ice hockey playing, tom boy, 13 year old grand daughter just fine. Grand kids get a book a month from grand ma since age 3.
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
marilee
Seventh in the Kingdom Keepers urban fantasy series for middle-grade readers and revolving around a quintet of teens tasked with saving Disney World. It's been three years since Dark Passage , 6.

My Take
It's an active world Pearson has created with a creative assortment of Disney characters who are good or evil. Those brooms for Fantasia are scary! The tension comes from not knowing who or which of the characters will come down on the Keepers' side and which will turn out to be the enemy. Using the hologram technology pulls in the techies — yep, I'm gadget girl, so it sucks me right in, lol. Still, the book is overlong, primarily because Pearson recaps most of the series.

It's black ops time for the Keepers as they spy, turn invisible, solve riddles, and battle the OTs — and their own side! — to save the park. Yeah, that's right. The OTs merely want to kill the Kingdom Keepers. God knows what the Imagineers want to do, but keeping them prisoner, spying on them…it doesn't say trust, and that midnight meeting Charlene stumbles into doesn't help. It's confusing to me as well if only because of those college scholarships.

There is an unexpected bit of history that is revealed to the Keepers. Some is disquieting, and some of it is more fascinating about Mr. Disney and Wayne. The role Disney expected Wayne to play, that Wayne has been grooming Finn for.

After events in Dark Passage , Finn's parents made him see a shrink. You'll crack up when you read how that ended!

Pearson creates an awestruck note when Minnie shows up and ups the tension as well. More tension and suspense swells as the race to find out what the OTs are seeking, the scavenger hunt to find it, and that momentary stop as the truth of it comes out. It made me want to know a lot more about Disneyland and Walt's start. Pearson has nicely incorporated the start of Disney and the evolution of his Mouse. You'll want to search out some of the old films!

It's the recovery of the "treasure" that brings up an interesting section on symbolism that explains it well and that writers might want to read.

The Story
Senior prom. At Disney World. If Finn can ignore the prom's location and concentrate on dancing with Amanda…

But the Overtakers have only gotten better, and it will force the Keepers to downgrade from DHI 2.0 back to 1.6. They won't be as invulnerable.

This is the big one. They're playing for keeps now and to save Mickey. A Mickey no one has seen in decades.

The Characters
The DHIs, Disney Host Interactives, are…
…holograms which interact with guests at the two Disney parks; the good Disney characters call them the Children of Light. Being a DHI is more of a cover for their true role: Kingdom Keepers. In their sleep, they cross over into Disney and do battle with the Overtakers. The models for the DHIs have earned full college scholarships and include Finn Whitman, who is the leader of the DHIs and still has his superstrength from Dark Passage . He's also in love with Amanda Lockhart, a Fairlie with a telekinetic power, who has become an unofficial member of the gang along with Jess whose ability is in the dreams she has of the future, her "sister" in heart, and another Fairlie, one who is harboring feelings for Maybeck. Other official members include Dill Philby, a.k.a., Professor Philby; Charlene Turner is the athlete of the team and has been offered her own TV series; Terry Maybeck is an artist and in love with Charlene (she does return it); and, Willa is brainy and quiet.

Aunt Jelly runs a pottery shop, Crazy Glaze, and is the woman who raises Maybeck. Finn's mom is still recovering from being overtaken. Mrs. Nash is Amanda and Jess' foster mother.

We first met Storey Ming in Shell Game , 5, and none of the Keepers are sure whose side she's truly on. Dillard Cole was Finn's best friend from school, and he died in Dark Passage . He's back now.

Disney employees
Wayne Kresky is a Disney Legend, helped Walt design Disneyland and then Disney World, and is a founding member of the Imagineers. Now he guides the DHIs. Wanda Alcott is his daughter and has helped in the past. Brad is an Imagineer technician. Joe.

Bert is a security guard as is Ava Gardner, although she's a stickler for everything in its place. William is the usual night delivery driver. Craig is a Cast Member at Disneyland.

The Archives hold the history and the knowledge of the parks. The Crypt is a bunker Disney built, and it holds the Morgue, a repository of retired Disney materials.

Disney characters who choose the good include…
…Rajah, the tiger who protects Princess Jasmine; Timon is a meerkat; Pumba, the warthog; King Triton; Violet from The Incredibles; the rats from Ratatouille show up, including Remy and Django; Minnie Mouse has an important part to play; Prince Phillip and King Arthur's knights will show up; Rapunzel with her hair; and, Elsa the Snow Queen whose powers will prove valuable.

Mickey Mouse is the character the OTs most want to destroy.

Brooke is a visitor to the park who helps Finn. A lot. Austin is a senior who wants to get on her good side.

The Overtakers (OTs) are…
…the Disney villains who plan to steal the parks' magic and change their world. Tia Dalma, a Creole witch doctor, has survived events in Dark Passage . Worse, she's bringing back to life Chernabog, the most evil of Disney's creations, the Evil Queen with her conjuring, and Cruella de Vil.

The Wraiths will suck the light right out of you. Madame Leota is a ghost in love with Master Gracey, and she killed his bride, Constance. Jafar is a powerful sorcerer, and Iago is his parrot. The weasels in Judge Doom's Toon Patrol are indestructible unless they're laughing. Card soldiers, dolls, and more…

SBS is Sleeping Beauty Syndrome, a type of coma a Kingdom Keeper falls into if they are trapped in their DHI form. DHI shadow enables a DHI to disappear. Fairlies have supernatural abilities.

The Cover and Title
The cover is an eye-catching combination of black, orange, and bright blue in a collage of events within the story. The evil eyes of Tia Dalma loom large in the night sky with the entrance to the Disney kingdom in front of her, the pavement breaking up into flaming chunks of stone.

The title refers to one who can save the park and reverse the damage: The Insider.
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
shankar
I had mixed feelings about this book. To be completely upfront, it has been one thing ending after another this week, but this was not one of the better endings. It wasn't the worst (how do you possibly have a worse ending than How I Met Your Mother?) but there were a lot of things left to be desired. I liked the addition of newer characters, like Elsa from Frozen, but I wasn't particularly happy with the end of this series. I had very high expectations for this conclusion, especially because it took place in Disneyland rather than DisneyWorld, but it just didn't quite meet them. There were a number of things that I though were loose ends, and I would have liked them to be wrapped up better than they were. Overall, it was an acceptable ending, but really not what I had hoped for.
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
erinsabs
This was a great edition to the Kingdom Keepers series. Highly enjoyable, action packed, and all-around fun book. It was great catching up with all the familiar characters again and meeting some new ones as well. Not so sure it was really a conclusion or last book though with an ending like the one this left (but I can't give anything away so you'll have to read it to find out!). Perhaps it will simply graduate from Kingdom Keepers to a more fitting name for their older age? Either way it was a good edition to the series and great fun to read!
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
marla
I first started reading this series because I love Walt Disney World. But, I enjoyed the characters and the storyline so I stuck with it. As a parent, I would caution other parents out there that there are some violent scenes in this book. I was a little shocked myself but, I guess Mr. Pearson figures his audience has grown (in age) over the course of the series.

If you've read the other books, you'll enjoy this one in order to just see what happens to the KK's.

A very fun read.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
mei mei ellerman
What a great conclusion to a fun series. Even as an adult I loved this series because I could picture lots of the story as places I had been. Since there is still a possiblity of more with the way it ended I hope maybe in the future he will pick up the story when the DHIs are adults. Thank you!!
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