Deadweather and Sunrise
The Chronicles of Egg, Book 1
فرمت کتاب
ebook
تاریخ انتشار
2012
Lexile Score
940
Reading Level
4-6
ATOS
5.3
Interest Level
4-8(MG)
نویسنده
Geoff Rodkeyشابک
9781101571941
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی
xxpish - Egbert is 13 years old, and lives on Deadweather Island, where the weather is always bad on his family's ugly fruit plantation. When his father puts together a crew on short notice, they are off to Sunrise, where the weather is perfect. Then they meet a man named Roger Pembroke, who invites them over to have dinner. Egbert, who's new nickname is Egg, falls in love with Pembroke's daughter; Millicent, and after Pembroke puts Egg's family on a hot-air balloon, they never return. Egg lives with the Pembrokes for three weeks, then on a journey up the side of the mountain with a man named Birch; Egg loses Pembroke's trust. In a thrilling tale of pirates, treasure, friendship and hiding, Geoff Rodkey delights readers with boatloads of action and a lot of not knowing who to trust. Will Pembroke find the treasure that he long has looked for, or will Egg find it first? What I thought about it: Deadweather And Sunrise was a fantastical read. The cover captured my attention and lured me in, for which I am very glad. Geoff Rodkey writes with such description, and sells you from the first few chapters. His imagination is wild and his touch of love is captivating. There are lots of emotions in this story: love, fear, hate, and many others. I could not put it down. The action in this book was enthralling, and made you wonder what would happen next. Deadweather And Sunrise is a must read for fan of pirates, action and suspense.
April 16, 2012
In this rousing debut novel, first in the Chronicles of Egg trilogy, screenwriter Rodkey turns his attention to the high seas. Thirteen-year-old Egbert (Egg) lives on none-too-pleasant Deadweather Island—home to horrible weather, a volcano, and a great many pirates—with his distant father and abusive siblings, helping maintain their fruit plantation. When his entire family vanishes in a mysterious ballooning accident, Egg is taken in by a wealthy merchant, Pembroke, who then tries to kill him as well. Egg’s struggle to stay alive takes him from one death-defying scenario to the next with breakneck speed, as he tries to figure out why anyone wants him dead. Aiding him are Pembroke’s beautiful daughter and a vicious, one-handed ex-pirate. Given that it’s a pirate yarn, the book has its share of gruesome moments (“Dead pirates lay all around, the deck red and slick with their guts”), but the overall effect is more comedic than terrifying, as Rodkey combines humor and adventure in a story full of cruise ships, wild pigs, treasure maps, and constant peril. Ages 8–up. Agent: Josh Getzler, HSG Agency.
April 15, 2012
This promising new series starts out strong with a story filled to the brim with pirates, treasure, intrigue and swashbuckling suspense. On his 13th birthday, Egg's entire family is lost in a hot-air balloon accident. Egg lives quite comfortably for a while with the wealthy Roger Pembroke and his family, including his spunky, dreamy daughter Millicent. Then, one awful day, Egg realizes that his benefactor was responsible for the death of his family and is now, in fact, trying to kill him as well. Corrupt and exploitative Pembroke has discovered that there is a Native treasure on the ugly fruit plantation owned by Egg's family, and he is desperate to find it. What does Egg have on his side? His wits and courage, a strange best friend named Guts, the questionable loyalty of the misfit pirates who once worked for his father and, perhaps most significantly, Millicent. Readers will really begin rooting for Egg after his family--who is actually pretty awful to him--is killed off and he is left to discover his strengths and make his own choices. Self-deprecating and funny, Egg's first-person account is compelling, and the dialogue and vivid setting, as well as the full cast of quirky characters, make it easy to get lost in this adventure. Fans of pirates and perilous quests will certainly enjoy this tale of hijinks on the high seas and eagerly anticipate the next installment of Egg's story. (Adventure. 9-14)
COPYRIGHT(2012) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
June 1, 2012
Gr 4-6-Egbert is the neglected and mistreated youngest of three siblings, growing up on an island in the Blue Sea, where his father owns an ugly fruit plantation manned by retired pirates. His mother died when he was born and Egg has been paying for it ever since. As the story opens, his father and siblings are dispatched to their presumed demise in a hot-air balloon, and Egg is left on his own to face the world. Of course where there are pirates there must be a pirate map, and treasure to be found, and a race to be the first to find it. Villains abound in this swashbuckling story, and they are not above using terrible means to get their hands on Egg and his possible fortune. There is also a love interest, Millicent, although her father is the cause of the loss of Egg's family. Eventually there's also a one-handed friend whom Egg meets in a fight to the death when he is captured by pirates. The head count is high, but Egg manages to fight his way to the end of the book, and together the three companions face off an army of soldiers in a triumphant denouement. The violence is extreme, and the dialectic speech of some of the characters may be difficult for some readers.-Jane Barrer, Steinway Intermediate School, Long Island City, New York
Copyright 2012 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
June 1, 2012
Grades 6-8 Thirteen-year-old Egbert dreams of escaping his dreadful familyand time spent farming ugly fruitespecially after a tutor arrives with a wagon full of books, which reveal the existence of a wider world. His release from his relatives, renaming as Egg, and subsequent pirate-packed adventures are hardly more serene, but at least he is not stuck on Deadweather Island. After teaming up with a former adversary turned sidekick and a dreamy rich girl (whose father is trying to kill him for his own father's heretofore unknown treasure), Egg journeys over land and sea, and battles man and beast, to protect both himself and whatever his father's mysterious cache may contain. While our hero's first-person sassiness, smarts, and romantic frustration are not always entirely convincing for someone who, prior to chapter 1, had only ever read one book, Principles of Citrus Cultivation, they are absolutely entertaining. Along with some good and gory descriptions (after all, pirates really aren't that nice), this introduction to the Chronicles of Egg series is pure fun.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2012, American Library Association.)
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