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The Secret Science Alliance and the Copycat Crook |  | Author: Eleanor Davis Publisher: Bloomsbury USA Children's Books
List Price: $10.99 Buy New: $5.75 as of 11/25/2009 03:20 CST details You Save: $5.24 (48%)
New (15) Used (6) from $4.04
Seller: The Bookworm's Attic Rating: 4 reviews Sales Rank: 43034
Media: Paperback Reading Level: Ages 9-12 Pages: 160 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8 Dimensions (in): 8.4 x 6 x 0.5
ISBN: 1599903962 Dewey Decimal Number: 741.5973 EAN: 9781599903965 ASIN: 1599903962
Publication Date: September 1, 2009 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description
Super-smart Julian Calendar thinks starting junior high at a new school will mean he can shed his nerdy imageâbut then he meets Ben and Greta, two secret scientists like himself! The three form a secret club, complete with a high-tech lair. There, they can work to their hearts content on projects like the Stink-O-Meter, the Kablovsky Copter, and the Nightsneak Goggles. All that tinkering comes in handy when the trio discovers an evil scientist's dastardly plan to rob a museum. Can three inventors, armed with their wacky creations, hope to defeat this criminal mastermind?
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| Customer Reviews: Super Neat-o! November 11, 2009 Nathan Hale (Way out west) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
My scientific minded, eight-year-old son LOVES this book. The artwork is incredibly detailed and snappy, there's so much to look at! Lot's of fun. Bring on the sequel!
Great next step November 10, 2009 Scifi/Fantasy Fan (NY) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
My son is in second grade and is an avid reader. I have a really hard time finding books that are not scary for him, yet are interesting and not girlie. He usually doesn't get to the end of the not scary "boy" books b/c he loses interest. This was a great find that was very engaging and he had me go on Amazon as soon as he was done to find the next one. That's when I found out it just came out. Let's hope the author is a fast writer. He especially loved the "inventions" and the secret hideout.
Amazing book September 17, 2009 Chris (Atlanta) 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
We picked up this book at the Decatur Book Festival without knowing anything about it. Both my boys read it and loved, loved, loved it! We were heartbroken that we hadn't gone to Ms. Davis' presentation since they missed the opportunity to meet her but of course, that was before we know how much they would enjoy the book. This ought to hit the children's best seller list.
What did they love about the book? The amount of detail in the drawings was impressive. Also, the side jokes that managed to be knowing but not cynical or snide. It is both a wise and an innocent book, at the same time. If you have brainy kids who sometimes think that they are out of step with the crowd, then they will find a hero in this book.
From my heart and from my hand, why don't people understand, my intentions? September 5, 2009 E. R. Bird (Manhattan, NY) 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
You know a book's gotta be good when the first thought that enters your brain after reading it is, "I bet this took the author YEARS and YEARS to finish!" If you're reading a novel then it's probably a good bet you thought that because the story is long and convoluted. But if you think it about a graphic novel, there's really only one reason for that. It must be heavily detailed, complicated, well written, and intense. Meet The Secret Science Alliance and the Copycat Crook then. A little book that, at the outset, didn't interest me much. The cover failed to lure me in and the title was meh all over. It really wasn't until my boss handed it to me to read that I decided to give it a go and see whether it was worth checking out. I'm so glad he did too since this is one of the most eye-popping, ambitious, intelligent graphic novels for kids I've seen in a long time. And I can guarantee you that it's like nothing your children have ever seen before.
When Julian Calendar starts school in a new town he is determined to fit in. No longer shall he be unceremoniously dumped into garbage cans for the crime of being a nerd. No! Julian is determined to hide his intelligence and smarts for as long as it takes to fit in. His plans, as it happens, are thwarted when two of his classmates (a girl and a jock) discover his secret and let him in on one of their own. Unbeknownst to the population at large, these kids are science geniuses. With Julian as their third they begin "The Secret Science Alliance". But dark machinations are afoot. When their Invention Notebook is purloined and a local scientist of questionable morality takes credit for their inventions, they are determined to get their property back. In doing so, however, they find that the villain plans to rob the local museum for an item of inestimable cost. Will they be able to stop him in time? Stay tuned, faithful readers.
Since I grew up with comics I've always been a little baffled by adults who tell me that they never "learned to read" comics. There's something about the sequential art that throws them for a loop. They have problems integrating the words and the images in their brains (thereby giving lie to the assumption that comics are less sophisticated than literature and art merely because they combine the two formats). Anyway, I always thought this was a pretty silly thing to say. Reading The Secret Science Alliance, however, suddenly I understand that perspective. It's a logical series of sequences, but Davis is playing with some incredibly sophisticated paneling here. Open up to the first page and you'll see what I mean. The book begins with a four part cause and effect sequence where the arrows containing the "before" sections lead you to see the "after" effects. The first three lead to the right and the last one leads downward. And amazingly enough, on this single page you learn everything you need to know about the character of Julian. Now kids with a love of comics will be able to figure all this out on their own, but it will take some effort on their part. Davis is making you work for her storyline and she's basically warning you of the complexity right from the start.
And speaking of complex, I don't think I've ever encountered a graphic novel for kids this chock full of tiny details. Some of them I'm pretty sure are in-jokes (Julian reads a paper that declares an Ann, E, and Leta as being the number one family in town) but others are there for the noticing (as when Julian is discovered to be excessively intelligent and behind his head the seal of "Operation Act Ordinary" appears with a large "Failed" sticker on top of it). Every single page is just teeming with the tiniest elements (love The Great Kablovsky Skiffle sheet music, by the way). Do you think Ms. Davis would get offended if I called her the Chris Ware of children's literature? Like Ware, Davis has a fine appreciation for a neat cutaway. Her crisp clean lines are indicative of Ware too (though she is diametrically opposed to him in terms of cheeriness). To be fair, let's just say that Eleanor Davis is the literary lovechild of Chris Ware and British artist Peter Cross (with maybe a touch of Jill Barklem for spice).
And can I tell you how much I love a book where a brilliant character does badly in school and it's because he's not good at tests? Davis takes her time thwacking preconceptions over the head when she has a notion to do so. Sure, Julian is pretty much your stereotypical nerd. But Ben is a jock who also happens to be brilliant, though his poor testing convinces him that he's actually dumb. And Greta may appear to be a dangerous maniac at first (Julian's words, not mine) but she's also brilliant and willing to take risks (and not wear pink unless she's in disguise).
Interestingly enough, the book this comic bears the closest resemblance too is a similarly strange concoction that has never been replicated. Got kids inspired to make their own inventions after reading The Secret Science Alliance? I think it's time you handed them Howtoons, a book that uses comics to show kids how to create everything from marshmallow guns to tiny ecosystems. Pair the two books together and you've a miniature Edison in the making. Heck, throw in Sir John Hargrave's Mischief Maker's Manual while you're at it, since Davis is particularly good at working in innovative pranks when she has half a mind to do so. But really, this book isn't like anything else out there. I've had a hard time reviewing it because every time I pick it up I start poring over the pages, finding new things to see and additional things to read. I don't know what else Ms. Davis has up her sleeve, but if she doesn't kill herself with overwork, I hope we can look forward to more books in this series soon. This is the kind of title that rewards the reader over and over again. Kids'll get their money's worth.
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