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SLEEPERS

From the Blue Planets World series , Vol. 1

A solid beginning to a trilogy that addresses all sorts of teenage alienation.

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In Pattison’s (Pilgrims, 2017, etc.) YA novel, a half-alien boy finds love but also racial tension at a high school on Earth.

Fifteen-year-old Jake Rose is half Risonian. His mother is the Risonian ambassador, come to Earth to plead the case of her people, who will soon have no home. (Attempts to temper Rison’s volcanoes have backfired and brought the planet to the brink of destruction.) The Risonians—an amphibious race—seek leave to take refuge in the cold depths of Earth’s oceans. As an allegory for immigration and refugees in general, they find themselves distrusted. Their detractors refer to them as sharks and fear they will turn aggressive if allowed to settle. Jake is in hiding, sent to his (human) father’s old high school but forced to conceal his identity: in particular his legs, which “Velcro” together in water to form a tail. Whatever happens, he must keep a low profile. But how can he when anti-Risonian activists are planning an ecological attack that will destroy diplomatic relations between the two species? How can he when Em—the girl in his biology class—might just be his first love? Pattison writes Jake as a teenager first and an alien second. This is an astute piece of characterization: His cultural disorientation mirrors the uncertainties of adolescence, his confusion about Em (and Earth customs) making him easy to relate to. Jake makes questionable decisions. He is both a young adult and an outsider. By conflating these two perspectives, Pattison humanizes the alien experience and—without pushing the point—paints xenophobia itself as faintly ridiculous. Grounded in the real-life locale of Puget Sound, Washington, Jake’s story bounces haphazardly (though not unpleasingly) between Risonian and romantic plotlines, one usually derailing the other. Ultimately, it’s his relationship with Em that emerges more clearly. Compared to the burgeoning romance, the anti-Risonian plan is lightly sketched. This, however, is not inconsistent with a teenager’s muddled priorities. Junior high readers should approve.

A solid beginning to a trilogy that addresses all sorts of teenage alienation.

Pub Date: July 11, 2017

ISBN: 978-1-62944-071-2

Page Count: 250

Publisher: Mims House

Review Posted Online: June 29, 2018

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 2018

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SUNWING

Filled with high adventure, this sequel to Silverwing (1997) stands well on its own, continuing the adventures of Shade, a bat in search of his lost father. Shade, along with his companions, flies into what seems to be an indoor bat paradise, created by humans. The humans aren’t as benevolent as they seem—they are attaching explosives to owls and bats, and using the creatures to bomb enemy cities. In a race against time, bats, rats, and owls join to escape the humans’ clutches and to stop Goth, a cannibal bat, who is attempting to conquer the bat world with the help of the evil god, Zotz. Criss-crossing plotlines keep the story hopping—an ongoing battle between bats and owls, Shade’s competition with Chinook for the attentions of Marina, an intelligent, pretty bat—while excellent characterizations make the anthropomorphizing believable. Despite some fudging of natural science to cast owls in a villainous role, this book evokes sympathy for bats, a much-maligned species. (b&w illustrations, not seen) (Fiction. 8-12)

Pub Date: Feb. 1, 2000

ISBN: 0-689-82674-5

Page Count: 266

Publisher: Simon & Schuster

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 15, 1999

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RICKY RICOTTA'S GIANT ROBOT

The mind behind the redoubtable Captain Underpants teams up with a new illustrator for a new series, featuring a pipsqueak mouse and his humongous metal friend. Enraged when his new robot refuses to destroy nearby Squeakyville, mad doctor Stinky McNasty turns a classroom lizard into a monster with a drop of Hate Potion #9. In the meantime, the robot, having bonded with little Ricky, intimidated the bullies who threw his backpack in the garbage, and taken up residence in his garage, lumbers into battle, saving the day in a flurry of reader-animated “Flip-O-Rama” scenes. In thick-lined cartoons, the hamfisted robot looks like Popeye in sheet metal; the bad guys all have squinty eyes; the fight is all. Children younger than the Captain’s readership may find this droll, but Pilkey’s just treading water; so rudimentary is the plot, so stock the characters, and so free is this of humor, that it may sink like the proverbial lead balloon. (Fiction. 7-9)

Pub Date: Feb. 1, 2000

ISBN: 0-590-30719-3

Page Count: 112

Publisher: Blue Sky/Scholastic

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 15, 1999

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