Reviews for The gryphon's lair Royal guide to monster slaying, book 2. [electronic resource] :

Book list
From Booklist, Copyright © American Library Association. Used with permission.

In this follow-up to her rip-roaring A Royal Guide to Monster Slaying (2019), New York Times best-seller Armstrong continues her skillful blend of action, adventure, and heartfelt character. Princess Rowan, though still a child, has become the Royal Monster Hunter, a position that makes her the frequent target of monsters as well as her ruling family’s political rivals. When a captured gryphon—the most monstrous of monsters—dies giving birth, Rowan adopts the newborn and, driven by her special bond to monsters, makes it her mission to deliver the beast safely to the homeland of its kind. The ensuing adventure is, once again, filled with a variety of mythological creatures—including firebirds, drop bears, wyverns, and the enchanting ceffyl-dwr river horses—edge-of-your-seat animal brawls, and enough quiet moments of character development to imbue the action with real stakes that readers will feel. Light political intrigue and derivative world-building matter little here, as Armstrong succeeds in crafting one of the most exciting hack'n'slash middle-grade Arthurian thrillers.


Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Princess Rowan and company return to battle monsters, bestial and human alike, in Armstrong’s action-packed sequel to A Royal Guide to Monster Slaying (2019). Having flouted tradition to trade roles with her twin brother, 12-year-old royal monster hunter Rowan has at last settled into routine—if you can call wyvern attacks, gryphon births, and political undermining from ambitious cousins “routine.” The court is thrown into upheaval once again when the gryphon that Rowan captured in the previous title as part of her monster hunting trials dies giving birth, and the fledgling beast rapidly grows bigger and more dangerous than Rowan can manage. After an accident, the princess reluctantly volunteers to return the creature to the wild—a task easier said than done when every monster in the kingdom seems to dog the princess’s steps. Armstrong follows the second-installment playbook almost to the letter, introducing new monsters and every fight sequence imaginable to test Rowan’s, Dain’s, and Alianor’s expanding skill sets and saving any real plot advancement for the inevitable third book. But action is no sin with such an impressive menagerie to feature—belligerent koalas and carnivorous aquatic horses just for starters—nor does Armstrong waste the opportunity to show readers the growing depth of Rowan’s sense of purpose and relationship with her friends. Rowan’s illustrated field guide continues to expand in the backmatter as well. Armstrong’s setting is a thoroughly multiracial (but not racialized) one, with the principals’ skin tones of varying shades of brown. A fun and fiery follow-up. (Fantasy. 9-12) Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.


School Library Journal
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Gr 4–6—Rowan returns in this follow-up to Armstrong's A Royal Guide to Monster Slaying. Readers do not have to wait long for the Royal Monster Hunter to land in another sticky situation. When the gryphon captured in her last adventure is killed while giving birth, Rowan convinces her mother, the Queen, to allow the baby named Tiera to stay in the castle so it can be studied before it's returned to the wild. When her mother's family attempts to claim the throne through scheming, Rowan is once again thrust into a highly dangerous yet necessary mission to bring Tiera home to her kin living high in the mountains. Following in the footsteps of the first installment, this entry offers nonstop action and adventure. Rowan and her friends not only encounter mythological beasts, they also deal with the everyday problems of the average middle schooler. Rowan must field rumors of her mother becoming involved with someone new after her father's death and navigate the misunderstandings and awkward feelings that come with friends becoming potential crushes. VERDICT An enjoyable follow-up to its rollicking predecessor. Recommended for fans of Rick Riordan and Tamora Pierce.—Sara Brunkhorst, Glenview P.L., IL

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