Immagine dell'autore.

Steven Weinberg (2)

Autore di The Plant Planet

Per altri autori con il nome Steven Weinberg, vedi la pagina di disambiguazione.

9 opere 193 membri 7 recensioni

Sull'Autore

Fonte dell'immagine: Jon Scieszka and Steven Weinberg give a presentation on the Children's Green Stage at the National Book Festival, August 31, 2019. Photo by David Rice/Library of Congress. By Library of Congress Life - 20190831DR0060.jpg, CC0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=82899145

Opere di Steven Weinberg

The Plant Planet (2019) — Illustratore — 77 copie
The Middle Kid (2021) 25 copie
You Must Be This Tall (2016) 20 copie
Fred & the Lumberjack (2017) 10 copie
Fun facts about animals (1985) 6 copie

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Sesso
male

Utenti

Recensioni

Note: I accessed a digital review copy of this book through Edelweiss.
 
Segnalato
fernandie | 1 altra recensione | Sep 15, 2022 |
Stuck between a bossy older brother and a naive younger sister, Middle Kid feels left out of two worlds. But even if—and maybe especially because—it's always overlooked, this kid's own world is just as big and important as his siblings'.
 
Segnalato
HandelmanLibraryTINR | 1 altra recensione | Dec 24, 2021 |
This is one of those books that left me cold but which might be a hit with kids. Maybe. I'm not sure.

The story begins with four creatures - AlphaWolf, SmartHawk, LaserShark, and StinkBug - being shot into space in the Thomas Jefferson nose rocket (from Mount Rushmore) which is also the secret NNASA headquarters.

Confused? Luckily Planet Earth is here to explain. According to Earth, in 1988 a top-secret, emergency mission was put in place with four superpowered animal astronauts, just in case humans ever catastrophically destroyed Earth. Which they have done. So the animals are off to find another planet habitable by humans.

The AstroNuts, guided by a somewhat glitchy 1988 computer, Command Escape, are off on their mission to find the Goldilocks Planet without destroying any existing life. Their first mission happens on Planet Plant, which, as you might guess from the name, is inhabited entirely by plants. Their adventures and escapades are interspersed with explanations of climate change by Planet Earth, science facts about plants, and why it's bad for a planet to have one life form that overpowers all other life forms. There's also lots of explosions, shooting lasers, eating exciting salads, and fart jokes.

The art is collages made from art from the Rijksmuseum, cut, pasted, and colored. There's two pages of back matter explaining how to collage and create art with free from this and other museums. The pages are busy with villainous plants, colored engravings, equations, collage creatures with sketched-in eyes and appendages, cut-out words, and speech bubbles.

I found this book to be... kind of a mess. There are multiple things going on, lots of yelling, explosions, chunks of collage everywhere, and it mostly just gave me a headache. I also thought there were some significant issues with the premise - why are they looking for another planet to ruin? How are they defining "intelligent" life? The plants are shown as the "bad guys" but the AstroNuts were destroying them and their home. I thought there were some gender stereotypes in there too. AlphaWolf is portrayed as a stupid jock, but he's still the "leader" while LaserShark is overly sweet, naive, and of course she is charge of housekeeping and feeding everyone.

On the other hand, there's definitely a lot of humor kids will enjoy in this and I can certainly see Bad Guys fans picking it up. But will they keep reading? It's much more challenging than a beginning chapter book, considering all the science that's included, and the very busy pages. I think I'd consider this a lower middle grade title, probably just right for fluent 2nd grade readers up to struggling 5th grade readers.

Verdict: I'm just not sure about this one. It's got universally positive reviews, but I feel like that might be a combination of the currency of the topic and the cachet of the Scieszka name. But I could be wrong! This could be extremely popular! I will have to test it on kids in book club to be sure. To be continued...

ISBN: 9781452171197; Published September 2019 by Chronicle; Borrowed from another library in my consortium
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
JeanLittleLibrary | 2 altre recensioni | Nov 3, 2019 |

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Statistiche

Opere
9
Utenti
193
Popolarità
#113,337
Voto
3.2
Recensioni
7
ISBN
238
Lingue
21

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