Parents' Guide to

Rainbow Magic Series

Rainbow Magic Series Poster Image

Common Sense Media Review

Betsy Bozdech By Betsy Bozdech , based on child development research. How do we rate?

age 5+

Friends' fairy adventures are fun intro to fantasy.

Parents Need to Know

Why Age 5+?

Any Positive Content?

Parent and Kid Reviews

age 5+

Based on 3 parent reviews

age 5+

Fine stories that get a new reader excited

Our child who just turned 6 can’t get enough of these books. When we bring a new one hike from the library, it’s like we are presenting him with an ice cream sundae. There is gasping and jumping up and down. I can’t say that I quite understand the appeal. He is very interested in fairies and magic, so the subject matter is certainly right up his alley and he reads them easily enough. There is very distinct good vs bad which I appreciate.
age 5+

Motivate independent reading but don't make me read another!

There are so many Rainbow Magic Fairy books, all written under the same made-up author's name, all with similar themes. They seem to all go about like this: two friends are doing some typical childish activities like camping, celebrating a holiday, etc when some bad fairy messes things up, so the title good fairy joins up with the girls to save the day. Every one I've read was benign at worst, and had positive messages of helping others at best. I find the writing to be pretty awful, but for the girl who's just ready for chapter books, the series offers a lot to like. I don't recommend these as a family read-aloud. Save them for when your child wants to read alone. The stories don't have great writing, so saying it aloud doesn't enhance a thing. The characters are entirely indistinguishable, so reading their dialogue aloud just gets muddled, but it's good practice for a beginning reader to follow. The crisis the characters have to solve is so predictable (for a grown-up) that I just wanted to be done, but my kids find it to be actually compelling. Unlike some other early chapty books which I will read aloud (notably the A to Z mysteries), Rainbow Magic books just aren't any fun for adults. My kids, however? They can't get enough! My eager advanced reader started on them in kindergarten. She checked out one every single week at the school library and still wants more. She gets through 3 to 4 of the series every week now (summer after kindergarten) still loves them. She can summarize the plots, as thin as I find them, and loves to imagine herself in the fairy world. Her twin sister is a beginner but she, too, loves the fairy books. She can't manage the chapter books yet but loves the few versions in the easy reader category. The books seem pretty bland, but I'll take that! Nothing controversial (that I've seen, at least), nothing too scary- but lots of friendship, a little problem solving, and a whole lot of great practice at reading!

What's the Story?

The RAINBOW MAGIC SERIES follows best friends Kirsty Tate and Rachel Walker, tweens who first meet during family vacations to Rainspell Island, where they help Ruby the Red Fairy and get involved in the first of many adventures to come. In each set of seven books in the series, the two girls meet a new group of seven fairies, all of whom have something in common (rainbow magic, weather magic, party magic, flower magic, and so on) and all of whom are somehow at risk of losing their magic because of a plot by the mean Jack Frost, who's usually motivated by a feeling such as jealousy or greed. The fairies (who are led by King Oberon and Queen Titania) recruit Kirsty and Rachel for help, typically in the form of recovering some kind of magic item that's also the target of Jack Frost's minions, the bumbling goblins. Inevitably, the girls face some kind of challenge or peril, think quickly to save the day, and help restore peace to Fairyland ... until the next time the magic finds them.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say (3 ):
Kids say (7 ):

This series won't win any awards for originality -- once you've read one of these books, you've pretty much read all 200+ -- but it's a sweet, fun introduction to fantasy for young children. The dangerous situations and quickly resolved cliffhangers are both fast-paced enough to keep kids interested and mild enough to ensure that those who aren't ready for anything edgier won't get too stressed about what's going to happen to Kirsty and Rachel. There's a somewhat stereotypically "girly" focus on fashion (the outfits of Rachel, Kirsty, and the fairies are always carefully described), but at least the fairies have a wide range of hair and skin colors and clothing styles.

If you're reading these aloud to your kids, once you're used to the books' pattern, you may find your mind wandering to bigger-picture questions -- just how many weeks off school do these girls have, anyway? And why aren't there any boy fairies? -- but as series for young readers go, Rainbow Magic is a fine choice. It's not a problem to read the different subsets of books out of order (any references made to other adventures are quick and in passing), and it's possible that a little fairy magic could encourage kids on the verge of "real" reading to make the final leap, which is always a good thing.

Talk to Your Kids About ...

  • Families can talk about what kids like about the Rainbow Magic series. Is it the characters? The plots? How are the different adventures similar to one another? What sets one group of books apart from the other?

  • What makes Kirsty and Rachel such good friends? Do you have any friends you're that close to? What kinds of adventures have you had together?

  • Which other book series do you like? What do they have in common?

Book Details

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