
Attack of the Mutant Underwear
فرمت کتاب
audiobook
تاریخ انتشار
2008
Lexile Score
680
Reading Level
3
نویسنده
Johnny Hellerناشر
Recorded Books, Inc.شابک
9781436144056
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی

In this delightful story, presented as a diary, listeners meet Cody Lee Carson. As he begins fifth grade in a new school, he decides to reinvent himself. Narrator Johnny Heller shares Cody's challenging and difficult, but always entertaining, journey. Heller splendidly recreates Cody's internal dialogues as he encourages himself not to slip back to his argumentative and defeatist old self. Heller's portrayal of Cody's sometimes girlfriend, Amy, and his pesky little sister are particularly enjoyable. An excellent choice--every young person will see him/herself at least once in this fun story. S.G.B. (c) AudioFile 2004, Portland, Maine

December 8, 2003
Despite its outlandish cover art and title, Birdseye's (The Eye of the Stone
) down-to-earth novel presents the journal of a chatty fifth grader determined to change his image as he enters a new school. Cody, however, gets off to a rather rocky start: the day before school opens, a girl sees him in his underwear through an open dressing-room door as he tries on jeans. Though Amy—who turns out to be a classmate—doesn't share this incident with their peers, Cody's embarrassment triggers recurrent nightmares featuring underwear-related debacles. The boy's intermittently bumbling attempts to be the cool "New Me" rather than the goofy "Old Me" lead to some thought-provoking choices on Cody's part, some comically calamitous episodes and some poignant moments. For instance, after seeing the popular boys shooting hoops, Cody writes, "I would have played, too, if they'd have asked me. But it was starting to rain anyway—again
—so I guess it didn't matter." The author hits a few shaky notes (e.g., Cody's disdain for cleaning his cat's litter box becomes tedious; his infatuation for Amy stretches credibility, as when he refers to himself as "Loverboy" in his journal). But many passages compensate for them—including the way Cody couches his bungling of the talent show as a step-by-step formula for creating a "really good disaster." Ages 8-12.
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