Disney books

Book Review: Our Kingdom of Dust by Leonard Kinsey

It isn’t All Squeaky Clean at the House of Mouse

Our Kingdom of Dust is a great tale to read during the pandemic when so many of our plans have been upended and rising anxiety about jobs and the economy have us wishing for happier, safer times. It is normal to think about the places you want visit once we are able to move freely again and many of us dream of the day we can return to our beloved Disney destinations.

The same is true of Blaine McKinnon, the lead character of the story. He is hurt and angry after a major set-back at the company he built from the ground up and the discovery that all of his relationships are superficial at best. He wistfully longs for the happy times spent at Disney World when he was younger and his parents were still alive. There is nothing wrong with this, in fact, taking some time away from a stressful situation can be really healing like the time my mother somehow scraped together the money to take my sister and I to Hawaii a few months after our dad died cancer. We were reeling and grieving and she showed us that life is still full of beauty and discovery even in the face of loss.

But…

What happens if you run after the joys of childhood at the cost of abandoning everything else? What lengths will you go to keep feeling the magic when a feeling can’t be sustained indefinitely? What would you do to protect the walls of the Disney bubble you’ve built around yourself when it is threatened by the sometimes excruciating pain of reality?

All bubbles pop eventually…then what?

That is the journey Blaine McKinnon takes when he heads to Disney World to mute the aching pain that is his life and discovers a group of people whose stories are different but who are also clinging to the comfort found in “the Most Magical Place on Earth”. This is a book of self-discovery and very definitely not a religious book but I cannot help but paraphrase the Bible in saying that Blaine has to come to grips with the question, “What good is it for someone to gain the whole (Disney) world, yet forfeit their soul?" (Mark 8:36) Ultimately, it isn’t really Disney World that will demand his soul; the truth is that he was already soul sick before he headed there looking for faith, trust and pixie dust. What will he do when that fragile thread of hope he grasped so desperately isn’t able to hold his heart, his soul, and all of life’s baggage?

WARNING: The characters are relatable and layered and the story is gripping but this book is not for everyone - it is full of sex, drugs, profanity, and brutality. If you were bothered by Netflix’s “Tiger King”, you will probably be bothered by this book. There is a very genuine yearning in these wounded characters and there are rays of hope and light but it is not a sanitized, family-friendly Disneyesque story. If Dostoyevsky was tackling suffering as a means of redemption for the Disney obsessed, it might look a lot like Our Kingdom of Dust. At only 192 pages, Kinsey tackles the “dark night of the soul” in a lot fewer pages than anything by Dostoyevsky and, at only $2.99 for the Kindle version (paperback and hardcover versions cost more), it is a very inexpensive and enjoyable examination of Disney escapism.

Leonard Kinsey also wrote Habst and the Disney Sabateurs, another fiction book set at Disney World. My review of that book is much shorter…I hated it; wouldn’t have minded if the main character was eaten by a dragon. In fact, I bought the two books at the same time and put off reading Our Kingdom of Dust for a long time because I disliked Habst so much but then found myself on a flight where Our Kingdom of Dust was the only thing downloaded to my phone that I had not already read and was wonderfully surprised. Habst and the Disney Sabateurs gets good reviews on Amazon so maybe I missed something. It’s Kindle version is also cheap - only $2.99 (paperback version also available) - so it isn’t a big risk if you want to give it a try.


About the reviewer: Annette is an avid reader who dreams of doing two back-to-back, long transatlantic cruises where they feed her and she has plenty of time to sit on deck reading a giant stack of books. She and husband Steve are the owners of Mouse Trip Travel, LLC, a travel agency specializing in Disney destinations. She purchased this book on Amazon and is receiving no compensation of any kind for this review.

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Book Review: Kingdom Chaos by Jeff Dixon (No spoilers)

One of my guilty pleasures is reading fiction stories set in the Disney parks. I wasn’t feeling well yesterday so it was the perfect opportunity to lay on my bed with the cat all day and binge read Jeff Dixon’s new fiction work Kingdom Chaos. This is the fifth book in his Dixon on Disney / Key to the Kingdom series that are all set in and around the Walt Disney World Resort though this story really does stand alone just fine so you can read it without having read the others. I don’t want to give to much away but the story is about the race to find the President of the United States and his family when they disappear from the Epcot monorail on the way to give a speech beneath Spaceship Earth. Will Disney’s Chief Creative Architect Grayson Hawkes and his team be able to unravel clues, rescue the first family, and expose the people behind this brazen kidnapping? The story moves along quickly and held my interest all the way through. It was a very fun read with polical intrigues, deep state conspiracies and divided loyalties.

These books have a similar tone to stories like the National Treasure movies or Brad Meltzer’s historical/political conspiracy novels. Because the book is so new, it may remind you of the TV series “Designated Survivor” whose story lines seemed taken right from the pages of this morning’s news. The President in this book is named Tyler Pride and he is controversial, bombastic and constantly at odds with the media. Hmmm, that sounds vaguely familiar…..

Jeff Dixon calls his books “Faction” - a combination of fact and fiction - because he weaves so much true Disney trivia throughout his stories. As a Disney fan, I read his novels with a colored highlighter in hand so that I can quickly find those gems hidden throughout the story again. Sometimes I want to read more about something he includes and other times I want to be sure to check out something he mentions when I am next at the Walt Disney World Resort.

Kingdom Chaos combines true Disney trivia with a fun fiction story.

Kingdom Chaos combines true Disney trivia with a fun fiction story.

I once wrote to Jeff Dixon in a fit of frustration because I read one of his books after reading Kelly Ryan Johns’ two Deadliest Cast Member books. I wanted to know what the fixation was with strong male protagonists and stories that killed off the women characters. Isn’t it enough that so many mothers are dead in the classic Disney animated movies!?! Let the women live already!!! He sent a very kind reply and told me that I would probably appreciate this book, which was not yet released, and he was right. There were two amazing female characters - Jillian Batterson and Juliette Keaton. They were strong, capable women who could look the head of Secret Service, the media or anyone else in the eye and stand their ground without a moment’s hesitation. The lead character Grayson Hawkes is clearly the hero of the story but it is equally clear that he couldn’t do what he does without the people he has at his side. It was Mr. Dixon’s kind email response that prompted me to invite him to become a guest contributor to this blog. You can find all of his posts by clicking on the Dixon on Disney tag.

This photo was shameless lifted from Jeff Dixon’s facebook profile to prove my point. @KeytotheKingdombook

This photo was shameless lifted from Jeff Dixon’s facebook profile to prove my point. @KeytotheKingdombook

Dixon doesn’t dive too deeply into his physical description of his protagonist Grayson Hawkes but there is one mention of Hawkes having a mop of shaggy, white hair. Have you seen Jeff Dixon’s photo? Maybe it is time for a second email to Dixon asking if he has ever jumped from the top of a Disney Skyliner car to keep ahead of pursuers.

Jeff Dixon’s day job is as a pastor so it tickles me a little that the book features physical battles, gun shots, death, and all the usual things that go with political intrigue but nary a naughty word. The strongest drink is a cup of coffee and no one has time to roll in the hay with everything that is going on in the story. Don’t worry though, it isn’t a heavy handed or preachy book other than a comment that the lead character has more confidence in divine providence than in luck and the suggestion that we should all pray for the President regardless of how we vote. If you are comfortable with someone saying, “God bless you” after you sneeze, you will be comfortable with this book even if you are not particularly religious. Well, there is one pretty preachy part towards the end but it was political and not religious in tone, or maybe it just seemed that way to me. Truly, the book works very hard to to be nuanced and thoughtful when presenting situations that parallel our real world challenges.

I think this is Dixon’s best fiction work yet and hope he has many more books percolating in his mind.

Click here for Jeff Dixon’s Amazon Author page

More about Jeff Dixon: Jeff has written a series of novels set in and around Walt Disney World entitled, The Key to the Kingdom, Unlocking the Kingdom, Storming the Kingdom, Terror in the Kingdom and his newest book, Kingdom Chaos. He is also the author of The Disney Driven Life, a book that draws life lessons and leadership principles from the history and life of Walt Disney. Some know Jeff as Dixon On Disney – and he resources and comments on Disney history, attractions, and news. He is a researcher that draws heavily on the incredible works of Disney historians and biographers with an attempt to understand and apply the life lessons that are uncovered. He is also a storyteller that transports readers into a world beyond their imagination.

About the reviewer: Annette is an avid reader who dreams of doing two back-to-back, long transatlantic cruises where they feed her and she has plenty of time to sit on deck, reading a giant stack of books. She and husband Steve are the owners of Mouse Trip Travel, LLC, a travel agency specializing in Disney destinations. She purchased this book on Amazon and is receiving no compensation of any kind for this review.

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Disclosure:  If you click on the Amazon link/book cover in this article and make a purchase, we will receive a small commission from Amazon and I'll no doubt just spend it on more books. ;-)

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Book Review: Murder in the Magic Kingdom

Murder in the Magic Kingdom, by Anne Salisbury and Bob McLain
Amazon price: Paperback: $14.95 / Kindle Edition: $4.99
Reviewed by Annette Johnson

Note: There are two books with the title Murder in the Magic Kingdom listed on Amazon.  This review is for the 2014 book by Anne Salisbury, not the 2008 book by Foreman Heard. 

Disney World cast member Tommy Boyd’s murdered body is found in the waters of the Jungle Cruise attraction and Josh, another cast member, comes under scrutiny because Tommy was inexplicably wearing one of Josh’s uniforms at the time of his death.  Though Josh isn’t detained, due to lack of evidence, he rightly feels that they’ll stop looking for other suspects unless he finds some compelling evidence to prove his own innocence and to point their attention elsewhere.  I don’t want to give anything away but what follows is a fairly short book (only 154 pages) that moves quickly through the Disney World theme parks to catch the real killer.     

What I like:   A lot of Disney park based fiction has a common theme of the current Disney leadership being motivated solely by profits and the need to find a rightful successor to carry on Walt Disney’s true spirit and vision for the parks.   That is fine - I’ve certainly imagined what I would do if I was at the helm of the Disney corporation – but it can also get monotonous.   Murder in the Magic Kingdom doesn’t go there; it simply places a murder mystery into the current Disney World setting.   The author is a former Cast Member so she weaves both the public and backstage areas of the park into the story in effective ways.  Josh, the lead character in the book, is likeable but refreshingly normal; he isn’t a genius or drop dead gorgeous – he's just a regular guy who was dropped into a bad situation and you can’t help but hope that things work out for him.

What I didn’t like:   The book would’ve benefited from better proofreading; there is a your/you’re mistake which is easy enough to read through.  There are a few places where the wrong word is used and it sort of stops the flow of the story as your brain tries to fill in the right word; for example, there is one place where one cast member “shames” the hand of another instead where it should’ve been “shakes”.   I felt like the book ended rather abruptly with too many loose ends; in particular, the main character was feeling like he was simply treading water in both his career and his relationships and there was nothing to indicate whether this rather dramatic set of circumstances helped him to find clarity or come to any decisions about his life.

Final thoughts:  The author has only published two books and this is her first fiction effort; her first book, which I have not yet read, is an autobiographical account of her experiences as a Disney VIP tour guide. Murder in the Magic Kingdom isn't a bad first work but may have benefited from a little more work and a little better editing. I bought the Kindle Edition and, at $4.99, it was an enjoyable, light read providing a quick fix to satisfy my Disney theme park addiction; I probably would’ve been disappointed if I’d purchased the paperback version for $14.95. 

About the reviewer: Annette has been reading mystery novels since she discovered Nancy Drew in her school library.  She and her husband love the Disney theme parks and launched Build A Better Mouse Trip / Mouse Trip Travel, a Disney-focused travel agency, over ten years ago so that they and their agents can help others experience the wonder and the magic of the Disney theme parks.

More Disney Related Book Reviews: 

Disclosure:  If you click on the Amazon link/book cover in this article and make a purchase, we will receive a small commission from Amazon.  At least that is the theory; it has not happened yet.  If it does, I'll no doubt just spend it on more books. ;-)

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