Tumtum & Nutmeg: Adventures Beyond Nutmouse Hall
Tumtum & Nutmeg: Adventures Beyond Nutmouse Hall
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Paperback ©2009--
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Little, Brown & Co.
Just the Series: Tumtum & Nutmeg Vol. 1   

Series and Publisher: Tumtum & Nutmeg   

Annotation: Wealthy, married mice Tumtum and Nutmeg find adventure when they secretly try to help two human siblings who live in a tumbledown cottage with their absent-minded inventor father.
 
Reviews: 7
Catalog Number: #5418933
Format: Paperback
Common Core/STEAM: Common Core Common Core
Copyright Date: 2009
Edition Date: 2011 Release Date: 06/07/11
Illustrator: Price, Nick
Pages: 503 pages
ISBN: 0-316-07574-4
ISBN 13: 978-0-316-07574-9
Dewey: Fic
LCCN: 2013404311
Dimensions: 21 cm.
Language: English
Reviews:
ALA Booklist

Evocative of classics like The Borrowers and The Wind in the Willows, this mouse tale should appeal to children who like to imagine little creatures operating behind the scenes. In a small cottage in England live Mr. and Mrs. Nutmouse (aka Tumtum and Nutmeg), who reside in a grand house inside a broom cupboard. Twisting the usual human-animal dynamic, Bearn presents the mice as faring better than the human family and trying to help the sweet-natured girl and boy. (Their mother has died and their father is an eccentric inventor.) The three old-fashioned adventures here recount the daring rescues, not-too-scary hostage dramas, and close escapes that ensue when human and animal worlds collide. Bearn draws the situations with amusing particulars, including human foibles for man, mouse, gerbil, and rat, and drums up plenty of suspense as Tumtum and Nutmeg are forced to suspend their cozy lifestyle to save their friends and themselves. Price's black-and-white illustrations capture the Nutmouses' goodheartedness and the humans' dampened circumstances in a cheerful, rustic style.

Horn Book

Three old-fashioned stories relate the adventures of a kindly mouse couple who "adopts" two human children, inside of whose rundown cottage nestles the rodents' own stately home. It's all very jolly, with lots of cozy-gentility shorthand (scones with jam, cucumber sandwiches, well-stocked picnic hampers), easy-to-hate Dahlian and Grahamean villains, and much derring-do amongst the estimable mice and their trouble-making friend General Marchmouse.

Kirkus Reviews

Charmingly old-fashioned but full of vigor, three tales about spry mouse couple Mr. and Mrs. Nutmouse offer humor and adventure. Tumtum and Nutmeg (fond spousal nicknames) live in "a big, rambling house with a ballroom, and a billiards room, and a banqueting room, and a butler's room" nestled secretly in a hidden broom cupboard of a cottage. In the cottage live Arthur and Lucy, human children whom Nutmeg and Tumtum clandestinely care for, explaining their helpful deeds by claiming to be a (single) fairy. The Nutmouses prefer peace and quiet, but the children's surly, musophobic Aunt Ivy strives to poison them until their wild and hilarious scheme expels her. That done, pompous General Marchmouse, a war hero given to "foolish heroics," embroils them in two more escapades, one involving gerbils and ballerinas, the other pirates. Bearn's neat, understated prose never missteps, while the small-scale domesticity nods to various classics including The Wind in the Willows and The Borrowers . Sweet but never saccharine—and how often do rescues involve mice on pogo sticks? (Fantasy. 6-9)

Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)

Bearn makes her debut with a trio of comfortingly old-fashioned tales about a pair of kindly mice, living in a forgotten broom closet in dilapidated Rose Cottage, home to Arthur and Lucy Mildew and their father. Tumtum and Nutmeg's residence—Nutmouse Hall—is as splendid as the Mildews' home is forlorn, and the good-hearted couple secretly takes on the task of putting, and keeping, the cottage in order. Unexpected adventures ensue: in each of the stories the decidedly nonadventurous mice rescue friends and defeat enemies, always putting themselves in great danger and emerging victorious. Very British in setting, tone and supporting characters (a blustery mouse general, an elegant elderly ballet mistress and her troupe of young ballerinas, greedy pirate rats), the stories are filled with descriptions of good food, cheering fires and warm beds. Price's black-and-white line drawings have a scratchy, comic air that brings a welcome edge to the gentle storytelling. While some may find the adventures on the quiet side, the sympathetic characters, enchanting setting and quickly paced plots will hold readers' interest. Ages 6–9. <EMPHASIS TYPE=""ITALIC"">(Apr.)

School Library Journal

Gr 2-4 Rose Cottage is a modest abode "rife with clutter and chaos." But behind a broom-closet door, hidden by a heavy chest of drawers, lies a 36-room mansion, home to Tumtum and Nutmeg Nutmouse. The retiring animal couple takes great pleasure in helping absentminded Mr. Mildew and his motherless children, who live in the cottage, in small waysdarning socks, rewiring heaters, and patching shoes. But a visit by the Mildews' odious Aunt Ivy turns the quiet couple's life upside down after the woman spots them on the upstairs landing. A full-blown mouse attack ensues, requiring the assistance of neighboring General Marchmouse and his mouse battalion. Adventure upon adventure follows, including trouble at the local school and an encounter with pirate rats (who are hindered by liqueur-filled chocolates). Before long readers know just what to expect from Bearn's characters: a can-do attitude and bustling efficiency from Nutmeg, even-tempered consideration from Tumtum, and from the General, an inflated ego and childlike impulses. The author provides enough twists and turns to keep the excitement high and fills her story with delightful details (outside of an occasional "earwig en croute," the mice nibble on piles of tasty homemade cakes, scones, and gingerbread, all described). Rustically framed pen-and-ink drawings appear throughout, adding panache to the presentation. This British import is as satisfying as high tea, and a perfect choice for competent young readers. Daryl Grabarek , School Library Journal

Word Count: 69,413
Reading Level: 6.1
Interest Level: 2-5
Accelerated Reader: reading level: 6.1 / points: 11.0 / quiz: 129606 / grade: Middle Grades
Reading Counts!: reading level:6.2 / points:15.0 / quiz:Q46912
Lexile: 900L
Guided Reading Level: T
Fountas & Pinnell: T

Three amazing adventures. Two adorable and courageous mice. One delightful family-favorite classic! Perfect for readers of The Borrowers, Winnie the Pooh, and The Tale of Despereaux, this illustrated 3-in-1 book includes three cozy novels:
--Tumtum & Nutmeg
--The Great Escape
--The Pirates’ Treasure

Deep inside the broom cupboard of Rose Cottage, two mice live in great style.

Tumtum and Nutmeg lead cozy and quiet lives, secretly looking after Arthur and Lucy, the disheveled human children of the cottage, never dreaming that so many exciting adventures will soon find them. But when evil Aunt Ivy, a squeamish schoolteacher named Miss Short, and pirating pond rats threaten the safety of those they hold dear, the courageous pair will stop at nothing to save the day.

In three thrilling tales with charming illustrations in every chapter, Tumtum and Nutmeg—along with the valiant efforts of veteran hero General Marchmouse, Ms. Tiptoe's bouncing ballerina army, and a team of caged gerbils—prove that small-size mice can have world-size hearts.

And for more Nutmouse Hall stories, read Tumtum & Nutmeg: The Rose Cottage Adventures.


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