Ratings32
Average rating3.8
Jake, an average suburban kid, is confronted one night by a creature from space who teaches him how to morph into the forms of other creatures. This fantastic, unpredictable, edge-of-your-seat series can best be described as an "X-Files" for kids--plus a whole lot more! Jake, Rachel, Cassie, Tobias, and Marco are the Animorphs--five kids who can change into any animal they touch. The bottom of each page is animated with "flip-book" images, so as kids flip pages, drawings of each character "morph" into animals.
Reviews with the most likes.
Wasn't allowed to read these growing up so now doing my own belated book club. Blown away at how good this is right out of the gate. Has a great campy sentai-show setup but pulls no punches with how gruesome this intergalactic war actually is. All of the morph descriptions are straight body horror, and the violence only gets away with being this gory because of Halo rules (it's not blood, it's yellow goo).
Our first POV, Jake, is fully the likeable leader boy archetype, but the character voice is so strong it hardly matters. Particular highlight is dog brain, which is exactly what you'd expect but even more charming. Under the YA nonchalance is a surprisingly affecting tragedy, particularly Jake's distant relationship with his brother (I imagine we'll see even more devastating scenes from the other POVs whose family life seems even more complicated).
Great start to this series. I am sure it goes off the rails over the next 50 (!!) books, but I'm fully bought in right now.
I loved this book! Why didn't I read this as a kid? My favorite thing about this series so far are the designs of the aliens and Tobias. Tobias is my favorite character and the Andalites have such a creative design. I can't wait to read the rest of these books they're pretty well written for kid's books. I feel like they do a good job taking their audiences seriously and even have scenes that could be disturbing for some ages. The characters aren't just like “animal powers sweet!” they all kinda have mental breakdowns and there are many parts that demonstrate psychological trauma very well. Some parts are very 90s which is my only critique. But it gives the series a kind of narm charm. Like the characters talk about video games and make stupid pop culture references a lot. Also, their names are kinda dumb (Jake, Rachel, Cassie etc.). I unfortunately got spoiled about what happens to Tobias :( I'll try to keep out of the animorphs tumblr tag til I'm a little further into the series. I can't wait to get more volumes out of the library!
I HAVE NOTHING BAD TO SAY ABOUT THIS
http://www.frowl.org/worstbestsellers/episode-52-animorphs-1/
I loved this franchise as a kid and have wondered for years now how the books hold up. Late last night I made the leap and reread book one for the first time since the '90s. I'm glad I did! It was a really fun, breezy read that made me want to continue onward through the entire series. Maybe I will.
Featured Series
37 primary books41 released booksAnimorphs is a 41-book series with 37 primary works first released in 1996 with contributions by Katherine Applegate, Michael Grant, and 3 others.
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160 booksTell us how you got into reading, what or who inspired you. Was it a book you read one day, a mentor, teacher? etc...
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199 booksBooks read in your formative years can shape the person you become just as much as parents, teachers and friends. What were some of the books that you remember most from your childhood years?