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Rump: The True Story of Rumpelstiltskin

by Liesl Shurtliff · (Fairly) True Tales #1

A funny, heartfelt fractured fairy tale that turns Rumpelstiltskin into the hero and asks what it means to be named only halfway.

Kid
73
Parent
61
Teacher
64
Best fit: ages ages 9-11 Still works: ages ages 8-13 Lexile 660L

The story

Twelve-year-old Rump has been stuck with only half a name ever since his mother died giving birth to him, and on a hardscrabble mountain where everyone pans for gold, that half-name is a daily joke. When he finds his mother's old spinning wheel, he discovers he can spin straw into real gold — a talent that looks like rescue but starts to feel more like a trap every time he trades the gold to the village miller. With his sharp-tongued best friend Red, a dying grandmother's last words in his ears, and a warning from a witch in the woods that magic always has consequences, Rump sets out to find his full name — and his real destiny — before the bargains he has already made come due.

Age verdict

Best fit: 9–11. Mature 8-year-olds will enjoy it; mature 12-year-olds will still find heart in it.

Our take

kid-magnet

What stands out

Each audience's top 3 dimensions. Out of 30 scored per book.

👦

Kids love

  • Ending satisfaction Exceptional

    A single physical action in the final chamber simultaneously resolves three separate plot problems, and a short epilogue inverts the Ch1 title into a full-circle naming moment — a deeply satisfying structural close that lands at A Wolf Called Wander (9, full-circle resolution with earned transformation) and beyond Mercy Watson: Something Wonky This Way Comes (8, every thread resolves).

  • First-chapter grab Strong

    Opens with 'My mother named me after a cow's rear end' — a voice-first, body-part-joke hook that delivers grief, stakes, and self-mocking narrator inside one sentence; stronger than All the Broken Pieces (7, YA verse with opening mystery) and on par with Lunch Lady and the Cyborg Substitute (8, kid-grounded opener that twists within five pages).

👩

Parents love

  • Stereotype-breaker Strong

    Multiple systematic inversions of fairy-tale archetypes — the passive-princess figure revealed as vacant, cruel, terrified, then a loving mother; 'trolls' reframed as exploited survivors; the source tale's title villain recast as the hero — work together; peer with A Snicker of Magic (7, quiet subversions of multiple conventions) and approaching A Wolf Called Wander (8, systematic dismantling of a classic stereotype).

  • Moral reasoning Strong

    Escalating trades with a predatory adult model stepwise moral compromise, an impossible promise-keeping dilemma asks readers to sit with a bargain that cannot be un-made, and the protagonist eventually uses the ethics of the bargain system against the adult; comparable to A Wolf Called Wander (7, several genuine moral dilemmas arising naturally from the story).

🍎

Teachers love

  • Read-aloud power Strong

    Multiple performable set-pieces — a Ch1 chant ('Thump, Bump, Rump') purpose-built for call-and-response, a two-reader rhymed dialogue between narrator and aunt, and an italicized crescendo at the self-naming climax — give real oral-delivery pull; peer with The Golem's Eye (7, Bartimaeus's sarcastic asides and dramatic timing as highly performable voice).

  • Classroom versatility Strong

    Distinct chapter clusters map cleanly to classroom units — naming and identity, consequences of magic, inheritance, agency — plus a cook's run-on monologue usable as a grammar-lesson model and 33 short chapters that fit a multi-week serialized read-aloud; comparable to Fantastic Mr Fox (6, works effectively across read-aloud + novel study + literature circle) and reaching toward A Deadly Education (7, strong for high school ELA).

✓ Perfect for

  • kids who loved A Tale Dark and Grimm, Ella Enchanted, or The Tale of Despereaux
  • readers graduating from illustrated chapter books into full middle-grade fantasy
  • reluctant readers drawn in by a short-chaptered, funny, self-aware narrator
  • fairy-tale fans who enjoy point-of-view flips and 'villain's side of the story' retellings
  • teachers planning a fractured-fairy-tale or folklore unit

Not ideal for

sensitive 7–8 year olds who are not yet ready for on-page parent and grandparent deaths, a promise involving a baby, or adults behaving cruelly toward children

⚠ Heads up

Death Bullying Violence

At a glance

Pages
264
Chapters
33
Words
62k
Lexile
660L
Difficulty
Moderate
POV
First Person
Illustration
Sparse
Published
2013
Publisher
Alfred A. Knopf / Random House Children's Books

Mood & style

Tone: Warm Pacing: Steady Clip Weight: Moderate Tension: Supernatural Threat Humor: Self Deprecating Humor: Gentle Wit

You'll know it worked when…

If your child flips back to the first chapter and starts re-reading the 'cow's rear end' opening out loud to a sibling, you have a finisher.

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