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MONSTER MAYHEM by Christopher Eliopoulos

MONSTER MAYHEM

by Christopher Eliopoulos ; illustrated by Christopher Eliopoulos

Pub Date: Aug. 28th, 2018
ISBN: 978-0-7352-3124-5
Publisher: Dial Books

A robot-building genius named Zoe discovers that making friends is worth the risk of disappointment.

Zoe, a black girl with puffy hair and no tolerance for dresses, is a natural at building complex robots, but she has a hard time making friends. Once, a classmate coaxed her away from her robot to play outside. But Zoe overheard her telling others that they weren’t really friends, and Zoe has avoided peers and shunned the idea of companionship ever since. She is a fan of kaiju—monster movies—and no one knows that she spends her spare time in an abandoned amusement park building a giant robot from spare ride parts. One day, she finds a ring and puts it on, and later that day, a monster from her kaiju movies appears outside her house. Chomp becomes her friend, but his friends and family come after him, and Zoe must find a way to save the city from the horde of building-eating monsters. When she finally turns to her teachers and classmates at her Advanced School of Technology, she discovers that getting help and being friends may not be so bad. The illustrations are endearing, Eliopoulos taking advantage of the graphic-novel format for appropriately cinematic double takes and exaggeratedly funny reactions, and the story will keep readers giggling, gasping, and turning pages all the way to the thoroughly delightful end.

Adventurous and exciting—and warm and fuzzy, too.

(Graphic fantasy. 6-11)