Nurk
Written by Ursula Vernon
Narrated by Bill Knowlton
4/5
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About this audiobook
Nurk is a quiet homebody of a shrew. But when a mysterious plea for help arrives in the mail, he invokes the spirit of his fearless warrior-shrew grandmother, Surka, and sets off to find the sender. It seems the prince of the dragonflies has been kidnapped, and Nurk is his last hope for rescue. Such a mission would be daunting for even the biggest, baddest, and bravest of shrews, and Nurk is neither big nor bad, and only a little brave. But he does his very best--and hopes his grandmother would be proud.
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Reviews for Nurk
76 ratings14 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5So great that I listened to the full cast audiobook version. Wonderful, funny story that kids & adults can enjoy
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5A sweet, but not cloying, adventure story for those who aren't entirely sure about the attractions of adventure but appreciate warm socks. Totally delightful!
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Cute! This one works for me as Dragonbreath doesn't. I like Nurk, and his insecurities and determination are excellent. Ridiculous amounts of luck, of course - from the Snailboat to running into the dragonfly princess, and just happening to have exactly what he needed with him. But it's fairy tale luck, with better characterization than fairy tales usually have. This looks like the first of a series, and I'm delighted - looking forward to reading more.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Nurk the shrew receives a letter intended for his grandmother, whose whereabouts are unknown. Nurk has never left home before but, packing clean socks and his grandmother’s diary (for advice), he sets out to return the letter to sender.Short and illustrated. Cute without being twee. His grandmother had, been all accounts, been a top-notch warrior, but this skill apparently didn’t translate into penmanship. The direction of the letters S and R appeared to have been determined by flipping a coin. She capitalised things at random and had a pirate’s distrust of punctuation. There was a definite take-no-prisoners attitude to her spelling, though. Surka spelled words as if they had personally offended her.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This is a sweet, delightful adventure book, without violence but with lots of heart. I love it, and it would be great to read to even a very young child.
I want to write like then when I grown up! (N.B. I'm in my 40s) - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Nurk, by Ursula Vernon, is very loosely linked to her much larger work, Digger. If you have read that work recently enough, you might remember the character Surka, who is both a shrew, and a troll. Nurk is the grandchild of Surka, and is living the quiet life and dreaming of going adventuring like his grandmother. When a water spattered letter arrives, enough of the addressees name is obscured that Nurk feels comfortable in opening it, assuming that it is for him. When he works out that a) it isn't, and b) it is a plea for help, he is greatly terrified - both of the consequences of opening someone else's mail, and that there is an adventure that needs having, and there is no-one to have it. Nurk chooses to go to find the sender of the letter, with the intention of apologising, returning the letter, and then sneaking off home.As with many things in life, the links between plan and what happens are tenuous. Nurk does find the sender of the letter, and does make it home, it is just the details in the middle that vary from his plan. Unlike Digger, this is an almost entirely text work. It presents as a children's book - and I think it does a very good job of presenting scary situations in ways that don't cover up the danger, but also don't over-emphasise them. (afterthought - I really liked the theme of the young male trying to live up to the reputation of his grandmother. Strong, wonderful, (absent,) grandmothers don't show up enough in fiction)
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This delightful little book was a fun read. With its charming illustrations and entertaining text, it certainly kept me entertained. Vernon has a quirky sense of humour, funny without resorting to "toilet humour" and also engages in clever wordplay. Nurk's amazing adventure was a pleasure to read. Although the plot did feel rather linear - with few twists and surprises and not a great deal of tension. But there were some little quirks to liven it up. And the illustrations brought the story alive.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Cute but contrived in ways I think the average 9 year old would be on to.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Nukus Aurelius Alonzo Electron Maximilian Shrew wanted to be like his adventurous grandmother, Surka the warrior shrew. He wanted to go on an adventure, but he was still living in his parent's home tree. Until one day he accidentally opened a letter addressed to his grandmother. He set out to return the letter and so began his own adventure.This is a fun book for young readers. It has fewer illustrations than her Dragonbreath books and none of the comic book style pages where the illustrations advance the story. I wish there were more illustrations.This story has been compared to The Hobbit. It has that "There and Back Again" feel of a timid creature going on an adventure while primarily concerned about keeping his socks dry.I recommend it. There are not enough good stories out there for young readers.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5It's a classic children's story of The Hobbit: or There and Back Again format, with illustrations by the author. Nurk, who is a homebody with a vague yearning for adventure-- much like Bilbo, and very like Mole in the The Wind in the Willows, thinks wistfully of the adventures of his grandmother, the fierce, adventurous Surka. When he accidentally opens a letter that is probably addressed to the vanished grandmother, he ends up setting out to find the sender and apologize. There are, of course, adventures after that, which he survives by doggedness and practicality and a clean pair of socks.I love it. I love the illustrations. I think it's very cute, and much better than, say, Redwall. But then, I'm a Mole/Baggins at heart, what can I say. :)
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Poor Nurk-- a small, cautious shrew who aches to live up to the legend of his fearless, warrior grandmother, Surka, and yearns for an adventure of his own, first needs to overcome his timid and practical nature. An mysterious letter for help-- along with the discovery of his grandmother's rather cryptic journal, start Nurk off on his first adventure where he meets creatures real (if you call talking dragonfly kings real) and fantastical. A wonderfully clever and engaging first work by Vernon--who is also the illustrator-- i initially thought it was a British import-- a gentle (sort of) old fashioned feel, reminding me of Le Guinn's Catwings and Dahl and Avi and Jacques. Nurk himself is familiar and sympathetic-- both nervous and brave, and while the adventure concludes as we would (hope) expect, the story is clever and endearing and very well written. Vernon pulls us in and we really care what happens to our hero. Watch for a sequel. This is great high quality fiction for middle elementary kids - so sure to please that i chose it to be the first intallment in our summer BookWorms ReadALoud Book Club. I'll let you know how the kids react. Highly Recommended.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5"Nurk" is a children's novel by artist/writer Ursula Vernon, a good little book punctuated by some of her own illustrations. It's the adventure of the little shrew Nurk, inspired by the writings of her swashbuckling grandmother Surka (and, a little, the threat of being brought up on mail fraud charges).The book works best when Vernon's whimsy takes flight - the ominous Salmon Tree, the imperious hummingbird mailman and his warnings about misrepresentation and mail fraud, or the better of the scattered excerpts from Surka's diary. The illustrations are nice and fit the book well; it's too bad there aren't more of them than there are.Most of the rest of the book is solid and occasionally funny; it's definitely a children's book, so the plot is straightforward and the message unsubtle and straightforward. A good read for kids with some great passages.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5A good, solid children's fantasy story with periodic brilliant moments. Vernon's imagination is truly inspired, bringing us a tree of unripe salmon and the often-abstruse scribblings of Nurk's warrior/fighter/dishwasher/pirate queen grandmother, as well as more predictable figures like the flighty adolescent dragonfly princess. Nurk himself is terribly endearing. This book should have wide appeal.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5If you're looking for a book the whole family can enjoy -- this is the book. If you're looking for a book for your pre-teens with a vocabulary-expanding text and winsome illustrations -- this is the book. If your child is not quite ready for the Redwall series, but you'd like to introduce them to that type of literature -- this is the book. If you're looking for something to read out loud to keep your children entertained on a wet summer afternoon or a long car ride, this is the book.