Falcon Quinn: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Deadpan Snarker]]: Quimby does well for being a head in a jar.
* [[Deadpan Snarker]]: Quimby does well for being a head in a jar.
* [[Defeat Means Friendship]]: Played with--Pearl insists on "defeating" Falcon and Megan in a fight (by swatting them with rolled-up magazines, as you do) before declaring that this defeat has made them friends. Which is all a part of...
* [[Defeat Means Friendship]]: Played with--Pearl insists on "defeating" Falcon and Megan in a fight (by swatting them with rolled-up magazines, as you do) before declaring that this defeat has made them friends. Which is all a part of...
* [[The Dulcinea Effect]]: Pearl suffers from a platonic version, in that she is willing to swear herself the lifelong friend of pretty much everyone she meets and is willing to die defending them. Quimby even [[Lampshades]] this tendency: "Are you sure you want to be tied to these kids for life?]]
* [[The Dulcinea Effect]]: Pearl suffers from a platonic version, in that she is willing to swear herself the lifelong friend of pretty much everyone she meets and is willing to die defending them. Quimby even [[lampshade]]s this tendency: "Are you sure you want to be tied to these kids for life?]]
* [[Elemental Powers]]: Elementals, natch, of which Megan is one.
* [[Elemental Powers]]: Elementals, natch, of which Megan is one.
* [[Eloquent in My Native Tongue]]: A variation--Shakespeare is said to have [[Beethoven Was an Alien Spy|secretly been a Frankenstein]], and the monsters consider his original "Frankenstein" drafts of his plays (which are written in [[Hulk Speak]]) to be far more beautiful and lyrical than the "human translations."
* [[Eloquent in My Native Tongue]]: A variation--Shakespeare is said to have [[Beethoven Was an Alien Spy|secretly been a Frankenstein]], and the monsters consider his original "Frankenstein" drafts of his plays (which are written in [[Hulk Speak]]) to be far more beautiful and lyrical than the "human translations."

Latest revision as of 12:40, 22 May 2021

The Falcon Quinn series is a series of children's fantasy novels by Jennifer Boylan, previously a writer for adults.

The titular Falcon is an almost-thirteen-year-old boy who lives with his grandmother in a small town in Maine. One day, on the freezing cold Spring Equinox, he nearly falls through the frozen pond in pursuit of his tuba. He doesn't think too much of it at first, and gets on the schoolbus with his classmates Max and Megan. But rather than winding up at school, they find themselves taken to a strange building with no architectural solidity, and are greeted by a strange woman who informs them that they're all monsters!

They've come to an Academy for Monsters, a place which seeks to educate them and their many fellow students about their monster nature... and how to repress it. Monsters, in addition to scaring humans, are hunted by the guardians--so-called "protectors" of humans. Of course, many monsters hold no love for humans, either. To top it all off, Falcon doesn't even know what kind of monster he is! Now he and his friends must make a choice: Do they stick with their cool new powers despite the odds, or do they try to blend in to survive?

Despite that somewhat-grim descriptor, this is a mostly lighthearted series that relies heavily on humor (as well as strong dialogue and characterization) to help tell its story and build its world.

Tropes used in Falcon Quinn include: