Percy Jackson meets Hayao Miyazaki in this contemporary Japanese
folktale, a sequel to Xander and the Island of Lost Monsters.
Xander Miyamoto should be feeling great. It's the beginning of summer
vacation, his mother has returned from a long absence, and he has
learned that he is a warrior with special powers. Xander never would
have guessed that the old Japanese folktale about Momotaro, the hero who
sprang from a peach pit, was real, much less part of his own heritage.
But instead of reveling in his recent victory against the oni, monsters
bent on creating chaos, Xander is feeling resentful. What took his
mother so long to come back? Why does his father insist on ruining the
summer with study and training? And why is Xander plagued by nightmares
every night? Maybe this whole Momotaro thing is overrated.
Xander's grandmother gives him a special baku charm to use to chase his
nightmares away. He just has to be careful not to rely on it too much.
If he does, the baku will not only take his dreams, but those of
everyone in the house, forever. Without dreams, there is no hope, no
motivation, no imagination, no Momotaro. And then it would be far too
easy for Ozuno, king of the oni, to wreak havoc. . . .
On his second quest, Xander explores new surreal landscapes, encounters
more strange and dangerous creatures, and faces even higher stakes as he
learns whether or not he has what it takes to be Momotaro.