Fotografía de autor

David Teague

Autor de Saving Lucas Biggs

8+ Obras 315 Miembros 16 Reseñas

Obras de David Teague

Obras relacionadas

Nerve: Literate Smut (1998) — Contribuidor — 126 copias

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Conocimiento común

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Miembros

Reseñas

Two children facing family crises created by the domineering Victory energy company team up to try to change history in this time-travel adventure. Great characters, and a story that focuses more on history and realistic steps to create change than magical abilities. Fantastic!

Advanced reader copy provided by edelweiss.
 
Denunciada
jennybeast | 9 reseñas más. | Apr 14, 2022 |
This review originally published on The Children's Book and Media Review

All Henry Cicada wants is to be ordinary and unnoticed, but this is hard to do when his dad spends all of his time in the basement trying to discover something useful to do with the odd green material his late wife discovered. Henry gets more than he wanted when he decides to stand up to the school bully, adopts a dog with only three legs, and then accidentally travels across dimensions into the imagination of a girl named Lulu through a doghouse made out of Elktonium. When he discovers that Lulu is in trouble and her aunt Tiffany is trying to crush her imagination and send her on the road to Nowhere, Henry knows he has to help. Even though what he thinks he wants most is to be ordinary, he learns that helping someone else who is hurting can make your own pain go away.

While it seems like this would be a fun, whimsical book, the entertainment is met with general confusion because of how it is written. Serious discussions about things like death, emotional abuse, and grief along with underdeveloped, strange characters and a setting that is never explored enough to make sense undermines both the message and the whimsical nature of the story. Instead of connection with the message or the characters, readers have to figure out what is going on and why what the characters want actually matters, and the story gets boring because there is no real emotion to drive the story in spite of some of the difficult circumstances the characters face. Readers who are looking for whimsy or a good message will be disappointed with this book.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
vivirielle | Aug 4, 2021 |
middlegrade fiction (innocent father gets death penalty so daughter decides to time travel in order to turn the judge back into a good guy). I got to p. 47 in this (ch.4) but didn't feel like continuing, though I do have respect for the author/illustrators (even if no cookie-eating dinosaurs ever show up--oh wait, that's Mark Teague I'm thinking of).
 
Denunciada
reader1009 | 9 reseñas más. | Jul 3, 2021 |
I generally enjoy Marisa de los Santos but this just didn't do it for me. I thought the story was disjointed and a bit violent for the target age group. I didn't see any other reviews that spoke to that, so perhaps it was just the way I perceived it.
 
Denunciada
Jandrew74 | 9 reseñas más. | May 26, 2019 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
8
También por
1
Miembros
315
Popularidad
#74,965
Valoración
½ 3.6
Reseñas
16
ISBNs
30

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