Subject: drlit reviews Kingdom Keepers 1-3 by Ridley Pearson
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Posted on: 2019-09-30 19:31:00 UTC
Oh, hey, I fit two reviews on this post after all!
All right, I know I’ve reviewed a lot of kid-aimed novels in my reviews here, but I think this is the first time I’ve been 100% embarrassed to admit to what I’ve been reading. The Kingdom Keepers series is definitely not up to the same level of quality as, say, the Harry Potter series. The characterization is a lot more basic, the dialogue is poorer and largely indistinguishable between characters, the conflicts within each novel feel inorganic and arbitrarily formed, and it’s all held together by random nostalgic Disney references, which while nice for hardcore Disney fans, isn’t really enough to qualify as world-building. Unfortunately for me, I am a pathetic gluttonous reader and a Disney fanboy, and I will not be able to stop reading the series, unless it really takes a downturn at some point in the future.
Well, thanks for reading my review. See you all next time.
. . .
. . . Yeah, no. I’m going more in-depth than that. Spoilers follow for Kingdom Keepers: Disney After Dark, Kingdom Keepers II: Disney at Dawn, Kingdom Keepers III: Disney in Shadow, It and vague character arcs in the Animorphs series. And apparently also Disney’s Sleeping Beauty, for anyone not up on their centuries-old fairy tales.
. . . I barely know where to start. I should mention it’s been a very long time since I read the first two books, and only got back into the series recently because I saw the third in a Goodwill. I don’t feel like I actually remember the first two very well, so I may be flat-out wrong/unfair about certain things due to faulty memory.
Let’s look at the main cast. I, perhaps unfairly, can’t help but see the main five Disney Host Interactives as rip-offs of the five human Animorphs. Finn is the Jake, the reluctant leader who gets roped in to becoming the authority in the group despite questioning why the role had to land on him. They both know their teams thoroughly well, and assign different tasks on missions based on their specialties. But whereas Jake got saddled with his position as part of the Animorphs’s group dynamics, Finn was basically forced into the role arbitrarily because he was the first to meet Wayne (the Dumbledore in this now-tangled comparison). So it feels less natural and more engineered. (Although Wayne is an Imagineer, so maybe that’s intentional?) Charlene is the Rachel, an athletic blonde cheerleader-type who takes things more seriously as the series goes forward, but in Charlene’s case, she was useless and whiny for the first two books and suddenly began book three announcing that she was focusing on exercise to serve a more active role to the team. So that felt kind of engineered to me, too. Maybeck is basically Marco, a façade of self-confidence and snark that covers the fact that he’s just as fearful and unsure as the other preteens in the group. His characterization works the best out of the main characters, since he’s willing to criticize and question the group’s plans, and has the most easy-to-recognize dialogue that stands out from the other kids. The connections get a little trickier after this. Philby is superficially the Cassie, in the sense that they both have technical know-how that’s critical to support each team’s needs (animal care and traits for Cassie, electronics and computer usage for Philby). But while we got to know Cassie so well over the span of Animorphs, as the troubled pacifistic caregiver torn between her duty to protect the world and her loved ones and the violent tool she was given to achieve that end, Philby . . . “does machines.” At least up through this third book, I really have no idea what kind of person Philby is, only that he knows how to computer. And that leaves . . . Tobias and Willa. But even if I were to be unfair to Tobias and overlook his character arc of being the orphaned Animorph with the missing mom and the confusing empty holes in his family tree due to alien shenanigans, even if I delineated his entire character to “the one who got turned into a bird,” he still triumphs as a paragon of complex characterization over Willa, who . . . can I get back to you? Like, Willa is basically just another pair of arms present. She has the same lack of character focus as Philby, but at least Philby has a hobby that happens to be directly useful for breaking into theme parks at night. Three books in and I just haven’t gotten to know Willa yet.
Now, as I said, I know I’m being unfair. Animorphs is a literal miracle for being children’s literature as good as it is, and not many series made for the same audience can ever measure up to it. Maybe I’ve forgotten something about Philby and Willa from the first two novels (though if I forgot that easily, can it really be so central to their characters?). Also, the books are focused unerringly on Finn as the focus character, so we don’t get to drop inside the other characters’ points of view like we could in Animorphs—although the Potter main series stuck pretty closely to Harry, yet we certainly know a lot about most of the Hogwarts characters and their families, don’t we? But one thing I know I’m not being subjective about is the dialogue in KK. Aside from Maybeck, who’s regularly self-aggrandizing or snide, the Keepers pretty much all sound alike. This often leads to conversations like this from chapter eight:
“Are you thinking what I think you’re thinking?” Philby asked.
“Do you see any other choice?” Finn asked him right back.
“Will some clue me?” said Charlene.
“Yeah, me too,” said Willa.
Painful. Generic. Interchangeable. And worst, it feels like an empty attempt to build up suspense for no reason. It’s almost half a page later that Finn and Philby finally reveal the plan they’ve just simultaneously cooked up to their teammates. But there was no reason to keep it from them that long.
The Maleficent in this series is weird. Just, off. Let’s do a quick run-down of the magic we see the Maleficent in Sleeping Beauty do:
-fire
-lightning
-oddly specific curses that take years to fruit
-thorns
-dragon
Now, how about KK!Maleficent:
-ice and cold—her body temperature literally chills the room
-lightning
-fire at the end of book three, finally
-dragon, but also
-vulture?
Actually, I liked the vulture transformation. It did feel like something the OF (original fairy) would do, and since she was standing on a raised stage at the time, it makes sense she would go for something smaller and lighter to fight with. But the cold and ice thing still weirds me out. In SB, she’s constantly got fiery particle affects around her, and even breathes fire at the end. Why the choice to focus her more on cold and even lightning than on fire in KK? All I can think of is that these are hints that she’s going to be revealed as a literal animatronic at same point (powered by electricity, and computers function at higher performance when kept cool), but that contradicts the idea that the characters who roam the parks at night are the literal characters, so I just don’t get where it’s coming from or going.
Now one thing that KK does handle better than most “child superhero” stories, even my bae Animorphs, is the involvement of the parent characters. Most such stories have the parents be so oblivious and unobservant of the literal war or whatever their kids are participating in that it starts to feel like neglect, even knowing that in some cases it really just is a necessary part of letting the setup work. But in KK, the weird goings-on in Disney parks of course start leaking out to the public as rumors, and the guardians of the Keepers themselves catch wind of it, immediately becoming suspicious of the physical signs of their children being outdoors at night, despite being in their beds all night. While it’s way too sidelined for the action to continue, I like the realistic mix across the parental figures of pure refusal to belief that Sci Fi Things Are Happening; to nearly full skepticism, but needing to take some precautions to prevent them from doing the maybe-thing because protecting the children is paramount; to starting to believe to the point that maybe I can help the kids a little if it’s for a greater good, but also they’re so incredibly grounded for putting themselves in harm’s way. It’s not focused on quite enough to be realistic, but it does seem to have ramped up quite a bit for book three, so I’m hoping to see more of it in the future. And like I said, it’s such a rarity to have realistic parents in a series like this, I like that I got any of it at all.
Buuuut typing that last paragraph also reminds me how arbitrary it is that the conflict against the Disney villains is being saddled on a bunch of preteens at all, when Wayne, his daughter, and a bunch of other Imagineers all know what’s going on. Like, I understand that they don’t want the world at large to find out that Walt set the parks up for his characters to secretly live in safely without the world knowing, but there’s no reason they can’t handle the situation on their own, internally. Especially since they should have all the Disney heroes on their side, who have a pretty decent track record of stopping villains. Most other stories that put a group of kids in danger have at least some internal reason for doing so in universe. The Animorphs couldn’t trust most of the adults in their lives, because anyone around them could have a Yeerk in their head. The adults in It were subconsciously being influenced to look the other way, and Pennywise’s imagination-fueled nature prompted child protagonists to be more effective anyway. Harry Potter was just purely the unhealthy obsession of Voldemort, and Voldy had enough power and influence that the adults in Harry’s life couldn’t keep him out of harm’s way with 100% success, forcing Harry and his friends to take actions of their own frequently, both for personal survival and moral responsibility to others. But here in KK . . . it’s child protagonists because it’s a child buyer demographic, I guess.
So like . . . has anyone else here even read these? I usually get proven wrong in this community when I feel like I'm treading undiscovered literary ground, but for once, I feel like I might be alone in the boat . . . Anyone?
—doctorlit supposes Pearson may be dealing with a huge amount of executive meddling from the Mouse, so not all of this is necessarily under his control?
“Finn opened his eyes to find himself lying beneath what looked like a giant spoiler. He flinched, flailing his arms, still half asleep.” “Finn opened his eyes to find himself lying beneath what looked like a giant spoiler. He flinched, flailing his arms, still half asleep.”