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Thirteen-year-old Doug relates in a series of blog posts how he saved the world but was falsely branded a terrorist and forced to fight the evil Dr. Roach and his armored biodroid army with an electronics-destroying superpower of his own. Book #1
Thirteen-year-old Doug relates in a series of blog posts the story of how he saved the world but was falsely branded a terrorist and murderer, forced to fight the evil Dr. Roach and his armored biodroid army with an electronics-destroying superpower of his own.
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Pros: excellent pacing and tension, nifty creatures
Cons: technology gets farcical, fun but stereotypical protagonists
For Parents: some violence
Will appeal more to kids than to adults. While it was a fun romp that made good use of the blog post format to help with pacing and tension building, by the end of the story the unbelievable technology and crazy creatures were a bit much for me.
Doug's guardian, Antie M, works for a secret weapon's laboratory. One night, while she's working late and he's playing videogames in the staff room, evil Dr. Roach and a group of mercenaries break in and steal equipment. Their goal: to digitize all the people in the world and create a utopic society using the protocal program and hotlink created by the lab.
As the first book in a series, this book introduces you to thirteen year old Doug - a boy who's not so good in school but rocks at videogames, and Jamie - a computer genious who wants to be a scientist when she grows up, and their Cyberskunk protectors.
The intended audience (10 and up) will love reading Doug's blog posts about how he's not responsible for the bombing of the medical facility near his town (actually the high tech weapon's laboratory). They'll love learning about the creation of the Cyberskunks and hearing about how Doug faces Dr. Roach and mercenary commander Hund. They'll sympathize with him when his digitized aunt comes online to tell him he has to finish his homework before doing another post.
Adults... well, it is a fun read, with some violence but otherwise no objectionable content. The short blog posts format helps create and maintain the tension in the story that's pretty intense anyway.