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Calamity Jack

by Shannon Hale, Dean Hale · Rapunzel's Revenge #2

A fast, funny, fairy-tale heist graphic novel with real heart

Kid
63
Parent
51
Teacher
45
Best fit: ages 9-12 Still works: ages 8-14

The story

Jack calls himself a criminal mastermind with an unfortunate amount of bad luck — and when one of his schemes goes spectacularly wrong, he's forced to leave the city he loves. Returning with Rapunzel at his side, he discovers a much larger problem than his own rap sheet: Shyport has a hidden giant problem. Fairy-tale callbacks, steampunk inventions, pixie assistance, and a pretty good case of first-crush jitters power this graphic-novel sequel to Rapunzel's Revenge.

Age verdict

Best fit 9-12; strong 8-year-old readers handle it well, and 13-14s still enjoy the craft.

Our take

kid-forward entertainment with steady parent value

What stands out

Each audience's top 3 dimensions. Out of 30 scored per book.

👦

Kids love

  • First-chapter grab Strong

    Opens inside Jack's self-aware narration as he calls himself a criminal mastermind with bad luck — voice-driven pull stronger than Sunny Rolls the Dice (5, GRAPHIC) but less immediate than Lunch Lady (8, GRAPHIC) whose cafeteria gag visual hook is faster; the mother's worried reaction within pages lifts stakes beyond simple caper setup.

  • Middle momentum Strong

    Three-part structure keeps momentum steady — scheming setup, exile and return, then climactic heist — comparable to Breakout (7, MG) which sustains a 22-day manhunt; subplot weaving around Rapunzel's presence and the ant-people mystery prevents sagging, though it doesn't reach the parallel-thread propulsion of 5 Worlds (9, GRAPHIC).

👩

Parents love

  • Reading gateway Strong

    Graphic-novel format plus fairy-tale familiarity plus sequel to a popular title make this a strong bridge for hesitant readers — between A Bear Called Paddington (8, MG) accessible illustrated structure and 5 Worlds Book 1 (10, GRAPHIC) gateway benchmark; lower friction than prose equivalents, reliable pick for transitioning readers.

  • Creative spark Solid

    Visual background gags, recurring invention bits, and the jacket-as-anchor motif reward rereading — between InvestiGators Off the Hook (6, EARLY) background-gag rewards and Lunch Lady (7, GRAPHIC) gadget-design re-read bait; Jack's narration earns a second pass but lacks the layered hidden subplot of Julian Is a Mermaid (4, PICTURE).

🍎

Teachers love

  • Reluctant reader rescue Strong

    Graphic-novel format plus adventure plus accessible chapter structure plus fairy-tale familiarity is a proven reluctant-reader combination — between Artemis Fowl (6, MG) concept-hook approach and Babymouse Goes for the Gold (8, GRAPHIC) visual-storytelling-on-every-page benchmark; strong rescue value for transitioning and hesitant readers.

  • Classroom versatility Solid

    Fits fairy-tale retelling units, graphic-novel studies, and independent reading but lacks the cross-cutting curriculum breadth of An Enchantment of Ravens (5, UNKNOWN) novel-study/mentor-text range; usable as a literature circle pick with supporting materials, not a multi-slot anchor like A Wolf Called Wander (10, MG).

✓ Perfect for

  • Readers who loved Rapunzel's Revenge and want more of the Hale fairy-tale universe
  • Fans of Babymouse, 5 Worlds, or Amulet who like adventure with real emotional beats
  • Kids who enjoy schemers and rogue protagonists (Artemis Fowl, Percy Jackson readers)
  • Reluctant prose readers who love visual storytelling
  • Fairy-tale-retelling fans ages 9-12

Not ideal for

Children sensitive to peril or giant/monster threats may want a buddy read; some readers may find the romantic subplot too prominent if they came only for the heist action.

⚠ Heads up

Violence

At a glance

Pages
148
Chapters
5
Words
11k
Difficulty
Moderate
POV
First Person
Illustration
Fully Illustrated
Published
2010
Publisher
Bloomsbury USA Children's Books
Illustrator
Nathan Hale

Mood & style

Tone: Adventurous Pacing: Steady Clip Weight: Moderate Tension: Physical Danger Humor: Self Deprecating Humor: Visual Comic

You'll know it worked when…

Kids who devour the first 30 pages almost always finish — the real question is whether they pick up Rapunzel's Revenge afterward (most do).

If your kid loved "Calamity Jack"

Matched across 30 dimensions — interest hooks, character appeal, tone, pacing, emotional core. Not by what other people bought. By what fits the same reader profile.

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