Photo de l'auteur

Christian McKay Heidicker

Auteur de Scary Stories for Young Foxes

6 oeuvres 620 utilisateurs 24 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Crédit image: photo by John Paul Lucas

Séries

Œuvres de Christian McKay Heidicker

Scary Stories for Young Foxes (2019) 337 exemplaires
Cure for the Common Universe (2016) 85 exemplaires
Thieves of Weirdwood (2020) 83 exemplaires
Attack of the 50 Foot Wallflower (2018) 54 exemplaires
Ghosts of Weirdwood (2021) 8 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Sexe
male
Professions
teacher
Courte biographie
[excerpt from author's website]
I spent several years working in education, developing instructional comic books for a non-profit, and teaching creative writing at Broadview University. I wrote science and history articles for 4th-12th graders over at Bird Brain Science, hoping to make young students giggle and gasp their way through what otherwise might feel like difficult science subjects.

I occasionally co-host storytelling evenings in Salt Lake City. If you can locate us, we'd love to have you.

Membres

Critiques

From Kirkus: "Dark and skillfully distressing, this is a story for the bold."
 
Signalé
BackstoryBooks | 13 autres critiques | Apr 3, 2024 |
4.5 / 5

I'll admit: what pulled me in about this book was the fact that I got some real "Ready Player One" vibes from it- from the orange cover filled with pixelated characters and buildings, the plot that focuses on a young man sent to video game rehab, and the promise of a gaming-themed quest.
Heidicker's novel is chock full of game references and shenanigans, and will likely delight anyone who loves a good round of Mario Kart.
The characters are also a blast to read about: there's Jaxon, the teen who JUST made a date with a beautiful girl before being sent to video game rehab (dubbed V-Hab). He's a chubby, socially awkward, slightly emotionless teen who will do anything to finish V-Hab in four days and make it to his date.
There's Soup, a 12-year old in V-Hab who is obsessed with Jaxon and also wins my award for the most adorable character of 2016 (seriously, this kid is so funny, and I just wanted to give him a big hug). And then there's Meeki, a Vietnamese lesbian; Aurora, a free-spirited yet conflicted young girl; Zxzord, the (possibly) heroin addicted "wizard". There is SUCH a fun cast of characters, and I really loved seeing their development throughout the novel. Their voices were very distinct and the clashing viewpoints each of them had were interesting to see bump up against one another.

I do think there was a small missed chance at giving a more in-depth commentary on some social and gamer issues. For example, there's a reference made to GamerGate, but with no explanation. For somewho who was reading this and aware of those issues, that's fine, but there will definitively be those who are unaware of GamerGate and will be missing the chance to learn about this and how it pertains to gaming.
The same goes for the conflict between Jaxon and Meeki. At one point, Jaxon agrees with her that since he is a white, straight, middle-class male, it is as if he is playing life on "Easy Mode", while Meeki (again, a gay, female Asian) is like playing life on an extremely hard mode. This is a very profound discussion point, but it gets a little glossed over. Although Jaxon learns from his bunkmates at V-Hab, I just wanted to see a bit more expansion of these ideas!

Lastly, this book was FUNNY. I found myself laughing out loud so much, both from the humor and the antics of the characters. Here are a couple of my favorite lines:

"Meeki! You've been here more than a week. We haven't heard enough from you. What makes you lonely?"
"I don't get lonely. I have Nutella. And a vibrator."

"Ha-ha!" I patted the steering wheel. "Daddy's gonna buy you an oil cocktail. Anything you want, baby."

Meeki snorted. "You're a player."
"Very funny," I said. "You need girls to be a player."
"I didn't say you were a player who wins," she said.

"With an addiction, you can't stop, no matter how hard you want to. Like alcohol." I looked at Casey and yelled, "Or organic cottage cheese!"

"Yo, why do people get pissed at 'Grand Theft Auto' but never at LEGOs?" a voice said from the bunks. "You ever stepped on one of those things? Fuuuuuuck."

Soup danced his egg along my lunch tray. "Muffin could use some companyyyyyy."
I groaned but then took the Abomination out of my pocket and set it on the table.
"They're on an eggy playdate," Soup said.




… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
deborahee | 1 autre critique | Feb 23, 2024 |
I'm glad the word "scary" is right in the title. "Scary" is not being used in a cute or ironic way here. This is not the kind of story where everyone is okay in the end. There's real danger and cruelty and death. But the story does have a bittersweet happy ending. All children's books should be as honest and hopeful as this one.
 
Signalé
LibrarianDest | 13 autres critiques | Jan 3, 2024 |
I deeply enjoyed this utterly original middle grade read. There is magic, mythological creatures, portals to a mirror universe, a fun in-world literature element, and ghosts. There are 3 main characters and one of them is irritating, but the others make up for it. I am truly excited to find out where this story goes in the sequel.
 
Signalé
HCSimmons | 3 autres critiques | Mar 11, 2023 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
6
Membres
620
Popularité
#40,587
Évaluation
4.0
Critiques
24
ISBN
52
Langues
3

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