Ottoline and the Purple Fox
by Chris Riddell · Ottoline #4
Cozy whimsical adventure with a gently meta heart — the Ottoline series finale.
The story
Ottoline Brown is throwing a dinner party in her crammed Pepperpot Building apartment, but a chance meeting at the bin park introduces her to the Purple Fox, a silky-voiced monocled recycler who invites her on a midnight Urban Safari through Big City. She discovers hidden flamingos on the library roof, meerkats popping from manholes, and a rooftop jungle of shy gorillas — and quietly notices that the Fox's silent assistant, the Crimson Vixen, has feelings he can't see. With her best friend Mr. Munroe and a new mirror-image peer named Myrrh, Ottoline sets out to give the Vixen a way to be seen.
Age verdict
Best fit 6-8; works as a read-aloud from age 5 and as a re-read at 9-10 for the matchmaking subplot.
Our take
balanced
What stands out
Each audience's top 3 dimensions. Out of 30 scored per book.
Kids love
- Ending satisfaction Strong
Ch.16 delivers a triple payoff — Fox finally sees Vixen, mutual naming (Peregrine/Magenta), foxtrot-and-balloon dawn departure — followed by the restoration beat with Mr. Munroe's silent hand-squeeze. As a series finale it closes every braid; similar to A Series of Unfortunate Events #12 closure satisfaction without the bittersweet ambiguity.
- Mental movie Strong
Format-native ceiling: the monocled fox in bin thirty-four (Ch.5), blue flamingos taking off from the Big City Library roof (Ch.10), and the hairy hand plucking a banana from a fishing line over a rooftop jungle (Ch.11) are unforgettable single-frame images. Riddell's maximalist art does the cinema directly — similar to Dog Man's visual punch.
Parents love
- Re-read durability Strong
Detail-maximalist illustrations throughout reward re-scanning at any age, and the running 'I hadn't noticed' gag (Ch.11/13/16) gets funnier in retrospect. Re-read texture similar to The Phantom Tollbooth — different layers surface at age 7 vs age 30.
- Writing quality Strong
Riddell's ellipsis cadence synced to page-turns ('They waited . . . and waited . . . until, all of a sudden,' Ch.11) is masterclass-level text-image marriage, and the Ch.8 postcard restraint is exemplary. Prose itself is pared to captioning-plus, so it earns above baseline by composition rather than by line beauty.
Teachers love
- Read-aloud power Strong
The Purple Fox's silky-voiced lines (Ch.5) are uniquely performable, the ellipsis cadence ('They waited . . . and waited . . .' Ch.11) is engineered for read-aloud pause, and short prose blocks fit lap-reading rhythms. Strong for one-to-one but not class-storytime power like a Mo Willems Pigeon book.
- Reluctant reader rescue Strong
Format is purpose-built for rescue — ~5,500 words across 192 pages, very low text-per-page load, picture-led spectacle sequences (Ch.10-11) carry readers through any middle fatigue. Strong for the format, though Dog Man remains the genre benchmark for true reluctant-reader pull.
✓ Perfect for
- • Children ages 6-9 transitioning from picture books to chapter books
- • Detail-hunters who love dense, maximalist illustrations
- • Fans of cozy, low-stakes adventures with quirky animal companions
- • Reluctant readers who need visual scaffolding alongside short prose blocks
- • Read-aloud bedtime sessions where the parent can perform the Fox's silky voice
Not ideal for
Readers wanting high-stakes action, sustained suspense, or contemporary American settings. The cozy-whimsical-British register is gentle by design; kids hooked on Dog Man's chaos energy may find it slow.
At a glance
- Pages
- 192
- Chapters
- 16
- Words
- 6k
- Difficulty
- Easy
- POV
- Third Person Limited
- Illustration
- Fully Illustrated
- Published
- 2016
- Publisher
- Macmillan Children's Books
- Illustrator
- Chris Riddell
- ISBN
- 9781447277927
Mood & style
You'll know it worked when…
Strong — short prose blocks and image-led spreads carry readers through with minimal effort. Series finale closure adds a sense of arrival.
If your kid loved "Ottoline and the Purple Fox"
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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