by
Adam Rex
In a marketplace of books overrun by escapees from
paranormal lands, here's one featuring a leprechaun, a rabbit-man and Bigfoot
that's a breath of fresh air. Cold Cereal, the first in a planned
trilogy, is full of magic and just as smart and funny as we have come to expect
from Adam Rex (The True Meaning of Smekday).
A rabbit-man meets up with sixth-grader Scott, just
after Scott's mother has moved him and his younger sister, Polly, to
Goodborough, N.J., to work for the Goodco Cereal Company. Scott has been seeing
strange creatures his whole life, but this is the first time that one has asked
Scott to hide him. In the meantime, at school, Scott makes friends with twins Erno
and Emily, who are in their own way just as strange as his discovery of a
leprechaun in his bed.
Much like its premise--a cereal company being run
by evil villains--the story gets sillier and also more serious. Rex uses Mysterious
Benedict Society–esque puzzles, and storyboards that poke fun at
advertising to complement the fast-moving story. Kids will appreciate his dry
sense of humor and the undercurrent of danger. Though the book's a bit on the
long side, most readers will find themselves drawn in by at least one of the
storylines, and Rex's stellar pacing takes over from there. Before you know it,
readers might be asking for toast instead of Lucky Charms, just in case the
tale has some basis in reality. --Stephanie Anderson (akaBookavore), manager of WORD bookstore
Discover: A great new chapter book for
middle-grade readers who like their books silly, magical, overfull and a little
bit dark.
Source: Shelf Awareness

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