Showing posts with label Book 8. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Book 8. Show all posts

July 15, 2025

The Puzzle of Doom (The Lunch Club, Book 8)

Written and illustrated by Dom Pelletier
Scholastic Canada
978-1-0397-1102-0
136 pp.
Ages 7–10
July 2025 
 
You know there will be laughs to be had if the secret club called the Lunch Club is meeting again. This time Leo and Tia, along with their club advisor Mr. Peabody, are pulled into a ghostly puzzle that comes from England.
From The Puzzle of Doom, written and illustrated by Dom Pelletier
In the prologue to Dom Pelletier's latest volume in his The Lunch Club series, readers are witness to Lord Puzzlegood who, while working outdoors on a puzzle at his club in 1890 London, is killed by lightning. His fellow puzzlers, threatened by his ghostly demands to find the final puzzle piece, lock him away with the puzzle while his earthly possessions are exiled to Canada.
 
In the present day, Leo and Tia, along with Mr. Peabody, are enjoying a local street fair where Madame Celeste (from an earlier adventure) gifts them with a protection amulet and crystal ball respectively. Tia also ends up with a piggy bank left behind by another vendor, Fred, a neighbour of Madame Celeste's.
From The Puzzle of Doom, written and illustrated by Dom Pelletier
At school, they meet new student Dale Picklesworth III who is on exchange from the Puzzle Collector's Club of England, another secret club. Leo is not especially friendly to Dale who is bright and athletic, talented and partnering with Tia. 

Everything becomes a little wackier when Leo and Mr. Peabody open a box hidden in the gym's storage area and Tia gets a message about the piggy bank being haunted. With that, Lord Puzzlegood rears his ghostly head in an effort to complete his final puzzle.
From The Puzzle of Doom, written and illustrated by Dom Pelletier
Dom Pelletier always brings the wacky and the fun with The Lunch Club, and, with The Puzzle of Doom, he introduces a new character and an ongoing story. (The puzzle is going to lead into a new adventure in Book 9 of The Lunch Club.) He gives us the supernatural, school- and friend-based tensions that all children will recognize–except for the ghosts, of course–and laughter through the puns, the clever repartee, and zany panic. I love everything about The Lunch Club, from the characters as they act and as they are drawn (by Dom Pelletier) to the humour of their situations and of their interactions, and to the silliness of the
extraordinary plots. In The Puzzle of Doom, Dom Pelletier makes readers laugh but still think about how we get along with others, about how to work together to find solutions to problems, albeit supernatural ones here, and about what the next adventure might be for the "Philately" Club. And by giving us eye-catching art and nutty cartoon characters, Dom Pelletier continues to hook young readers and keep them returning to the Lunch Club.
 
 • • • • • • •
The Lunch Club series
#1 It Came From the Basement
#2 The Curse of the Scarewolf
#3 The Mutant Mouse from Outer Space
#4 Revenge of the Bigfoot
#5 The Return of the Mummy
#6 The Swamp Thingy
#8 The Puzzle of Doom

March 04, 2022

The Case of the Hanging Food Catcher (A Gumboot Kids Nature Mystery)

by Eric Hogan and Tara Hungerford
Firefly Books
978-0-2281-0337-0
32  pp.
Ages 3-6
November 2021
 
If your children are familiar with Scout and the Gumboot Kids, a CBC Kids' TV series, then you're already aware of the show's exploration of nature for young children. To date, creators Eric Hogan and Tara Hungerford have transferred those stories into 8 picture books, all based on investigations into the natural world. The latest, The Case of the Hanging Food Catcher, has young readers joining mice Scout and Daisy in the field as they amass clues to solve their newest mystery.
From The Case of the Hanging Food Catcher by Eric Hogan and Tara Hungerford
As Scout checks out his fall pumpkins, Daisy declares that she nearly walked into a hanging food catcher. Together they note the clues that might help them understand. The clues include the gate, silky thread, and a fly, leading them to a beautiful spider web as it catches a fly. In keeping with the education aspect of the series, Scout and Daisy do their own research on spider webs and ties it into their own appreciation of the natural world and some delicious food of their own.
From The Case of the Hanging Food Catcher by Eric Hogan and Tara Hungerford
I don't know who creates the felted mice or their woollen sweaters, hats and scarves, but that labour-intensive work has paid off in charming characters and scenes. (Not surprising that there are plush toys of Scout and Daisy available.) By wrapping very simple nature stories for young children in these characters and scenes, Eric Hogan and Tara Hungerford are speaking to children at their level without talking down to them. They take a basic scientific method approach to exploring nature, embed it in an uncomplicated plot, and enhance that learning and entertainment with some science–notes on the spider's morphology and behaviour are included–and a nature craft of weaving. The Gumboot Kids Nature Mysteries may not be intricate and highly detailed but they shouldn't be for this age level. They provide meaningful introductions to a variety of topics based in the natural world by captivating youngsters with delightful characters and inspiring creativity and an interest in that outside world. With The Case of the Hanging Food Catcher, children will probably never look at a spider or its web in the same way again, and instead be inspired to organize their own explorations of the natural world.
 
• • • • • • •
 
Gumboot Kids Nature Mystery series
The Case of the Vanishing Caterpillar (2019)
The Case of the Story Rock (2019)
The Case of the Wooden Timekeeper (2019)
The Case of the Growing Bird Feeder (2019)
The Case of the Singing Ocean (2020)
The Case of the Buzzing Honey Makers (2020)
The Case of the Shrinking Friend (2021)
The Case of the Hanging Food Catcher (2021)

July 11, 2017

Stealth of the Ninja

Written by Philip Roy
Ronsdale Press
978-1-55380-490-0
225 pp.
Ages 10+
March 2017

When Alfred Pynsent set out in his twenty-foot, diesel-electric submarine three years ago, he was an explorer. He's navigated the Maritimes near his home in Newfoundland, the St. Lawrence River, the Atlantic, Arctic, Indian and Pacific Oceans, South Africa, India and saw more in a few short years, both travel-wise and experientially, than most people do in their whole lives.  And he's just on the cusp of turning seventeen.  But, Al has turned from explorer to eco-warrior having seen the desecration of the oceans first hand.
I know that the sea is dying.  I mean, the water will always be there, of course, but the life in it won't.  And even though there are still days when whales breach in front of my sub, and dolphins race playfully past, and flying fish soar over my head with the funny whispering of their fins, there are much longer stretches  when I see nothing on the water but garbage and torn nets with rotting sea animals, as if the sea were nothing but one humongous human garbage patch. (pg. 2)
Heading to Japan, Al is apprehensive, as months earlier (Eco Warrior, 2015) he had helped the Sea Shepherd Society prevent a tanker from refuelling Japanese whaling ships and he was accused of sabotaging a Japanese tanker in Australia (he didn't).  But, when he discovers an old barnacle-laden freighter, seemingly abandoned, six hundred miles southeast of Japan, it's the beginning of a new adventure for Al that has him learning the ways of ninjutsu, being tossed around in his sub by a tsunami, robbing a new acquaintance's home, and saving a life.

Aboard the rusty freighter, Alfred meets Sensei, a 100-year-old Japanese man, a ninja, who has made the ship his home, growing a garden and collecting the plastic detritus of the oceans within the holds.
His face was gentle, kind and wise.  It was cut with laugh wrinkles, which meant he had probably spent most of his life laughing.  And yet there was something about him that was sad, as if he carried happiness on the outside, but sadness on the inside. (pg. 11)
Sensei teaches Alfred the ways of the ninja– jumping, stealth, stick fighting–and instills in him the disciplines of meditation and exercise, though the perseverance and determination Alfred demonstrates are all his.  When they witness a tsunami encroaching, Alfred and his canine first-mate, Hollie, seek the shelter of the sub but cannot convince Sensei to join them.  Except for a few cuts and bumps on the sub explorers, the submarine survives but the old freighter has flipped and is sitting between 130 and 140 feet below the surface.  Alfred is convinced the plastics have buoyed the ship and that Sensei is still alive.  Heading to the port of Choshi for help, Alfred finds the streets almost deserted because, he soon learns, of the tsunami's impact, most notably on the Fukushima nuclear reactor.  How will he get the help he needs to save Sensei without putting his own life in jeopardy, without getting caught by the authorities looking for him, and without breaking an agreement he made with Ziegfried, his friend and engineer of the submarine?

Stealth of the Ninja is the eighth book (!) in the Submarine Outlaw series and it is as riveting and fresh as any book in the series.  Still amazing is that, although I encourage you to read the whole series because it is so engrossing, Stealth of the Ninja and all its predecessors can stand alone as adventure novels, rife with action and extraordinary characters.  And those characters are truly extraordinary.  From Alfred and his first-mates Hollie and Seaweed to Sensei (whose name we never learn or even need to know) and the Japanese men Yoshi and Hitoshi whom he meets, the characters are so real that I could imagine finding photos of them online and recognizing them instantly.  Moreover, Philip Roy always bathes his stories in such distinctive settings that they are virtual characters.  From the submarine and Sensei's ship to the ocean and the streets of Choshi and Okinawa, Philip Roy creates worlds to which readers can travel in their minds to experience Alfred's  ventures and vicariously face dangers beyond the norm.  Still, though they are wonderful adventure stories, Philip Roy has much to tell us about the oceans and the world and the impact we have on them.  Alfred may seem disheartened at times–though he finds some hope at the conclusion of Stealth of the Ninja–but I think Alfred himself is a source of hope that there are amazing young people out there who care about this world and, recognizing its problems, see themselves as part of the solution. They may not all do it as stealthily as Sensei and Alfred but there's still hope that it's getting done.  By telling the stories of the Submarine Outlaw, Philip Roy gives us all hope as well.

Submarine Outlaw series by Philip Roy