Jinxers, by Sabrina Chase
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Jinxers, by Sabrina Chase

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Young Jin survives on his own in the streets of Thama, using his wits and climbing skills to find food and shelter. On a bitterly cold night, desperate to avoid freezing, he enters the burned wreckage of a long-abandoned warehouse searching for anything of value. Searching despite the danger—for the warehouse once belonged to jinxers, and no one knows how their magic works...or how long it remains. Jin discovers a beautiful crystal sphere in the ashes—and suddenly finds himself transported to the desert world of Darha. His foreign appearance immediately brands him an outsider, and he must rely on his Darha friends to conceal him from the mysterious rulers of the local fort. But Jin must face the fort's dangers—for inside may lie the key to his return to Thama...and the key to his own hidden magic powers.
Jinxers, by Sabrina Chase- Amazon Sales Rank: #100600 in eBooks
- Published on: 2015-03-07
- Released on: 2015-03-07
- Format: Kindle eBook

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Most helpful customer reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. A fun story for everyone By Peter Dixon I thoroughly enjoyed Jinxers. I'd been looking for a new book to read with my son as part of our bed time ritual, and thought this would be a fun one. I was not disappointed. We read the first two chapters and after tucking him in for the night, I thought it wouldn't hurt to read a little more for myself. At 2:00 AM this morning I finished it, and I can say without a doubt that I look forward to finishing it (again!) with my son.Jinxers is a story about a young boy, Jin, who accidentally discovers an ability to move between worlds. The story follows him on the adventure he has as he makes friends and learns how to use his power, while attempting to thwart others who share his abilities and are exploiting another world.I found the book to have a fun, fast pace with a swashbuckling vibe. I enjoyed the two worlds Ms. Chase created, one modeled after Victorian England, and one that had a distinct Arabian Nights feel. I liked the inventive titles Jin and his friends would teasingly give one another, and I found the character development to work well with the story. I was intrigued by the magic system and I like the direction that Ms. Chase is taking its impact to both worlds.I would recommend Jinxers to all age groups, even though it is classified as YA. My 6 year old son is already drawn into the story and eager read more with me, and my wife is reading it for herself now and is liking it. I hope to see more books in the same world as Jinxers.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. Definitely worth a read. By Frumious Bandersnatch This was a very refreshing book. I have been disappointed in many new novels as they tend to use gratuitously bad language and inapproptiate innuendo (if not out and out porn). This book avoided all of that and turned out to be a very charming and enthrall ink story indeed. I found out about this book from The AOSHQ book thread and am hoping that the authoress can be convinced of turning this into a series and maybe doing other novels of a like manner.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. More Lost Than Usual , and what you can do with it By Pat Patterson I'm 61. Do I qualify as a Young Adult? Well, based on my reaction to Jinxers, I'd have to say yes.Jin is a street rat, fighting for survival in a bitterly cold winter in a city of Thama. (I'm thinking London-ish, but YMMV.) He's cold and hungry, and he lost his shelter in a fire. He's on the run from thugs, who think he might have stolen gold from his deceased benefactor; actually, he thinks he stole the gold as well, but the truth is that he took it to the undertaker to pay for a decent burial. It's a neat little plot point, which keeps him on the edge, regardless of the other circumstances.While searching through the ruins of a burned out building for something he can swap for another day of life, he finds...Okay, I promise this won't be a very long rabbit trail. When I was around 10, marbles suddenly emerged as a wonderful thing for boys to have. Nobody that I knew ever played with them like Tom Sawyer, but we collected them and swapped them. Some of them were incredibly beautiful....a glowing glass sphere, and when he takes it in his hand, a door to another world opens up, and he falls through, and he is WARM! Hot, actually, because he's in a sandy desert (I'm thinking generic Middle East, but again, YMMV) and before long, he passes out......only to awake in an underground cavern, where he is cared for by a woman and her daughter, both of whom are "swathed in fabric from head to foot."And his adventures begin......I appear to be fascinated by the use of ellipses in this review...There comes a point in every good book where you find you are captured. After that point, there is NOTHING you can do, because the author OWNS your attention. I'm guessing what all authors strive for is an opening sentence that accomplishes the capture: Call me Ishmael; "TOM! YOU, TOM!";Louis Wu was under the wire. Those are classic, and there are certainly others which may be your personal favorite, and I hope not to insult you by leaving them out. You may, if you wish, append them to this review by way of adding a comment. However, the point at which Sabrina owned MY attention was when I read the title of Chapter 2, which is: “More Lost Than Usual.”Is that not beautiful?"More Lost Than Usual." That would make a good bumper sticker, wouldn't it?Jin and Zinde ( the daughter swathed in cloth) and Moro (the son of the well digger) conspire to free the village of Gilbadeh from the grim predations of The Repressive Exploiters, in the process discovering allies and enemies, some more incredibly beautiful marbles, umm, I mean glowing spheres, and bounce from world to world in the process. If you think that rips the beauty from the story, it does. The ferocity of Zinde, who craves any reason to use her father's sword, and the snarky comments of Moro must really be read to be appreciated. I'm leaving out the contributions of the adults almost entirely, because the story isn't about them. It's also really not about the ability of Jin to manipulate the marbles to open the portals, although that is an essential plot point; those with that ability are referred to as Jinxers, hence the name of the book. What makes the book satisfying, other than the excellent writing, is that Jin finds freedom from his demons of guilt, and finds family and purpose as well.I hope this isn't going to be a stand-alone book. The characters are engaging, and there remains a great deal of injustice to be relieved, but there are ethical issues with that, as well. I'd like to see how those resolve, so:Please, Sabrina, may we have some more?
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