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Max and the Spice Thieves – 4 Star Book Review

Posted on April 14, 2021 By Jenna No Comments on Max and the Spice Thieves – 4 Star Book Review

Welcome to one of the April 14th stops on the blog tour for Max and the Spice Thieves by John Peragine, organized by XPresso Book Tours. Be sure to follow the rest of the tour for spotlights, reviews, author guest posts and interviews, and more!

Please note that this post contains affiliate links, which means there is no additional cost to you if you shop using my links, but I will earn a small percentage in commission. A program-specific disclaimer is at the bottom of this post.

About the Book

Max and the Spice Thieves
Secrets of the Twilight Djinn Book One
by John Peragine

Publishing 20 April 2021
Crumblebee Books

Genre: YA Fantasy
Page Count: 271
Add it to your Goodreads TBR!

When his mother goes missing, Max Daybreaker’s world is turned upside down. Luckily, a crew of Spice Pirates, led by the mysterious Captain Cinn, help Max on his dangerous mission across the three seas.

Along the way, an unlikely alliance aids in his search—a teenage warrior queen, a three-eyed seer, and an assassin spy.

Their journey takes them through treacherous lands while facing shapeshifting bears, an ancient witch, harpies, and the nightmarish Djinn, who will stop at nothing to enslave the world.

With every new challenge, Max unlocks the secrets of his unsettling past. Powers awaken within, forcing him to question everything he knows.

Is Max who he thinks he is? Only time and destiny will tell…

Amazon US | Amazon CA | Amazon UK

My Review

My Rating: 4 Stars
Consider liking my review on Goodreads.

I was invited to download an eARC of Max and the Spice Thieves via NetGalley when someone on the author’s team found my other reviews on Instagram, and I accepted. A couple of months later XPresso Book Tours put out a call for tour hosts for this title around the time I was planning to fit it into my schedule anyway, so I figured why not and hopped on board. This does mean I was technically offered eARC access twice, and I do think I would have picked this one up either through XPresso’s tour or just browsing SFF titles on NetGalley (in fact my NetGalley dashboard recommended it to me as well!) but I would like to sincerely thank everyone who invited me to read and review. This has not swayed my opinion; my thoughts are my own and my review is honest.

Max and the Spice Thieves is a middle-grade fantasy adventure about a boy named Max with a severe dermal allergy to the cold who inadvertently finds himself missing both of his parents and acting as a member of the crew on a “pirate” ship of sorts in a world where spices are luxuriously valuable, sea monsters are real, and not everything is as it seems. When Max begins to experience an awakening of power he didn’t know he had, everything he thought he knew about his life and the world around him is going to change.

At first I was tempted to compare this book to contemporaries in the genre, like Riordan’s Percy Jackson novels, but the further I went along the more I thought of Homer’s The Odessy and The Iliad. I was about to graduate high school and no longer interested in anything that could be classified as a children’s book when Riordan started publishing, so Percy Jackson isn’t a nostalgic reference for me but rather something I stumbled across later in life. Homer is what I was reading in middle school. This is a more fun, more age-appropriately worded alternative. (Thank you for thinking so highly of us 12 year olds, Mrs Jakubec, but I doubt the majority of my peers appreciated 9th century Greek literature as much as I did.) Regardless of which camp of epic journey with fantastical Greek elements you choose to pitch your tent in, I do think Max and the Spice Thieves will offer something invitingly familiar.

That’s not to say that this book isn’t unique, because it absolutely is! This story may have familiar bones, but the configuration and flesh are completely new. I’ve never read a character quite like Max or Captain Cinn (I love Captain Cinn!) and the idea of someone whose driving goal in life is to get a little spice into the hands of as many people as possible is so charming. I do think both the intended audience and older readers alike will be able to find something to love in this book.

My one big stumbling point here and the reason it’s not a 5 star perfection contender is that the size of the cast and the breakneck pacing through a staggering number of important plot events seem to have been stuffed into too few pages. There’s no breathing room in here. Quite often I’ll critique books for being 50-100 pages too long, but this one is 50-100 pages too short. I have high hopes that pacing and cast overcrowding issues will smooth out as the series continues.

Thanks again to everyone who invited me to read this book. You were all right on the money suggesting that I would enjoy it! I recommend this book to all middle-grade fantasy lovers and all lovers of epic journeys with fantastical elements or mythology influences.

About the Author

John Peragine is an author of over fourteen books. The Secrets of the Twilight Djinn series was written as a bedtime story for his son Max to cope with medical issues he was facing as a little boy. John is a full-time ghostwriter who lives with his son, wife, and a menagerie of animals on his vineyard overlooking the Mississippi River.

Website | Facebook | Twitter | Goodreads

Tour Schedule

April 12The Bouncing Tigger ReadsI Smell Sheep
April 12Living in a BookworldSascha Darlington’s Microcosm Explored
April 12The Avid ReadeBookHounds YA
April 12From the TBR Pile
April 13Literary GoldWrite. Read. Live.
April 13Reading TonicBooks+Coffee=Happiness
April 13TLC Book NookWishful Endings
April 13Jazzy Book Reviews
April 14The Book ViewWestveil Publishing
April 14breen.rbLady Hawkeye
April 14What Is That Book AboutBooks a Plenty Book Reviews
April 15Rants N ScribblesCandlelight Reading
April 15Valerie Ullmer | Romance AuthorJessica Belmont
April 15Iron Canuck Reviews & MoreBooks, Tea, Healthy Me
April 16Quiet Fury BooksSmokin’ Hot Reads Book Blog
April 16Bookworm for KidsHurn Publications
April 16Books By Maeve

Disclaimer: As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

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Book Reviews Tags:4 star review, crumblebee books, fantasy, four star review, john peragine, max and the spice thieves, netgalley, secrets of the twilight djinn, xpresso book tours, ya, ya fantasy, young adult

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Comments (0) on “Max and the Spice Thieves – 4 Star Book Review”

  1. John N PERAGINE says:
    April 14, 2021 at 12:21 PM

    Thank you for hosting and reviewing my book!

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    Reply
  2. Giselle says:
    April 14, 2021 at 3:18 PM

    This sounds like a really fun adventure! Glad you liked it! 🙂

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  3. Pingback: Max and the Spice Thieves – With a Book in Our Hands
  4. Pingback: Max and the Isle of Sanctus – 5 Star Book Review
  5. Pingback: 5 Star Review: Max and the Citadel of Light by John Peragine – Westveil Publishing

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