Used price: $0.65
Collectible price: $10.35
Buy one from zShops for: $2.89
List price: $13.50 (that's 20% off!)
Used price: $0.55
Collectible price: $6.95
Buy one from zShops for: $3.99
Well I wasn't disappointed. It is the first book in years that I have read that has me laughing out loud and chortling every few minutes. His description of life with four kids under the age of six is so accurate and heart felt that you just want to go over to his place and pay a visit (although the floor is sure to be sticky, the furniture toppled over and the noise level at high volume).
He covers a full year in the life of his brood, dissecting birthday parties, Hallowe'en, school concerts and less-than mundane visits to laundromats, jewelry stores and doctors' offices. Although I thought that I was happy that my own kids have graduated to their teens, I get slightly melancholy reading about this young family's everyday adventures. But it is so wonderfully written and entertainingly told, there isn't room for sadness.
There is also not a wasted word in the book. It is tightly written and even his stream-of-consciousness word play with his toddler is efficient and sharp. But most of all I love his observations about the nature of kids... his and the rest of ours.
"... Ed is a perfect conductor (of sticky and messy materials). Ever wonder how the honey or Magic Marker is conveyed to the rug and the furniture? I tell you, it's through the kids. Ed is amazing, he's like copper wire, he can reach for a jam-filled donut with his right hand and instantly discover jam on the tablecloth under his left hand. I myself have seen this."
Dave Barry would retire if he knew that Richard Scrimger was entering the field. This has got to be the funniest dad alive.
Used price: $3.38
Buy one from zShops for: $4.93
However, his father doesn't show up at the airport, and Alan finds himself lost and alone with the wheelchair-bound Frieda, a sarcastic and somewhat angry girl a year older than himself. The two end up smack dab in the middle of quite the adventure: thieves are smuggling in Egyptian artifacts on the very flight the two kids took, and it seems that Frieda - whose parents also neglected to show up - might hold the key to solving the mystery.
The strength of Richard Scrimger's writing is in his characters. Alan, the narrative voice of the book, is a completely realistic young man (or at least, as realistic a young man as one could be when caught up in an illegal Egyptian artifact smuggling right with a wheelchair-bound cranky girl and a dog with an alien in its nose). Reactions of both adult and child alike are done intelligently, and presented with a realistic emotional overtone: When Alan's father doesn't show at the airport, for example, Alan has a mental replay of his divorced parents fighting about his father's lack of responsibility. Put simply, Scrimger doesn't pull punches, and it's a pleasant surprise - it's also a nice reminder of just how young kids tend to think - and what they think - about the world around them.
A good tale for reading aloud, "A Nose for Adventure" will likely promote some intelligent questions from the child that reads it. The chapters are just the right length for bitesized nightly reading sessions before bed, and I, for one, can't wait to read the book again - this time with my nephew.
First, though, I think I'll go grab a copy of "Nose from Jupiter," the first book in the series. "A Nose for Adventure" didn't suffer for my lack of reading the first book, but I imagine it will flourish with the other half of the tale. From what I hear, there's a sequel, "Noses are Red" due out sometime this year...
Used price: $0.39
Collectible price: $12.71
Buy one from zShops for: $2.15
Overall a good purchase, as long as it's not your only source and not expensive to own.
Used price: $1.90
Collectible price: $5.28
Buy one from zShops for: $5.33
Used price: $4.83
Buy one from zShops for: $4.49
List price: $18.99 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $3.12
Collectible price: $10.59
Buy one from zShops for: $3.95
Used price: $6.27
Buy one from zShops for: $5.31
Used price: $4.30
Buy one from zShops for: $4.50
Life is tough - and real - for Alan, and Scrimger pulls no punches.
Then an alien, Norbert, takes up residence in Alan's nose, and things go quickly awry in Alan's balanced (if somewhat sad) world. Norbert is quickly mistaken for "Squeaky" - Alan's new nickname as the school's suddenly gifted ventriloquist. As Squeaky starts tossing bon-mots aplenty around the school, Alan finds himself unwittingly insulting the bullies, telling girls how he really feels, and being - just this once - the life of the classroom.
What's heartening about this tale is not really the antics of the alien in Alan's nose - though certainly the humour is a blast and it's enjoyable to the extreme. What got my real vote was the true-to-life child frustration that Scrimger wove into the plot. Alan worries that his father doesn't care about him anymore, and that his mother is just too busy to really pay attention. He's a witty kid, and very smart (in non-math ways), and I doubt anyone would have any trouble empathising with Alan's world.
The balance of humour and real-life in this book is nothing short of artful, and kids will appreciate not being spoken down to in this tale. Snap it up, and be prepared for an eventually triumphant novel that will touch on some real emotionality.
'Nathan