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Chargement... The Maze of Bonespar Rick Riordan
Books Read in 2018 (1,320) Chargement...
Inscrivez-vous à LibraryThing pour découvrir si vous aimerez ce livre Actuellement, il n'y a pas de discussions au sujet de ce livre. This book reminded me a lot of some other series I've read recently—unrealistic, over-the-top action, characters that know everything they need to know to progress, and one can never be quite sure who to trust. And yet, I enjoyed it more than I feel like I should have. By the time I got to the end, I was invested. I don't normally enjoy a book where you can't trust anyone, because characters are betraying each other left and right, but I still couldn't help but start to trust a couple of the potentially treacherous side characters by the end. And now I want badly to know how it will turn out with those characters. I also can't help but want to know what the big prize is, even though I suspect it will either be ridiculous or a letdown. I've heard of this series for a long time and considered reading the books years ago, but never have until now. I wonder if I might not have been ready for the style and tone of the book until now, since I've read a few other series with the same kind of wildly unlikely storylines—at least one of which I liked (Mr. Lemoncello's Library) and one of which I really didn't (Treasure Hunters). Now, I'm more able to let some of the things that might have bothered me in the past go and enjoy the story for what it is. I'm not sure how I'll like the change of authors throughout the series, but I'm definitely going to keep going.
Bookish Amy and hyperactive Dan are agreeably flawed characters but have an undeniably focus-grouped, manufactured quality — as does, let’s face it, the whole book...When the book tells us that Dan loved his grandmother because “she’d treated him and Amy like real people, not kids,” we hear what’s wrong. The writing is carefully bland, as if it didn’t trust its readers enough. Riordan, who has plotted the main arc for the series, gets the ball rolling nicely with likable brother-and-sister heroes, a cast of backstabbing relatives, and a smattering of puzzles and clues to decipher in the quest for the ultimate secret. The book dazzles with suspense, plot twists, and snappy humor, but the real treasure may very well be the historical tidbits buried in the story. This ought to have as much appeal to parents as it does to kids—it's Webkinz without the stuffed animals, and a rollicking good read. Est contenu dansContientPrix et récompensesListes notables
Juvenile Fiction.
Juvenile Literature.
Suspense.
HTML: Minutes before she died Grace Cahill changed her will, leaving her decendants an impossible decision: "You have a choice - one million dollars or a clue."Grace is the last matriarch of the Cahills, the world's most powerful family. Everyone from Napoleon to Houdini is related to the Cahills, yet the source of the family power is lost. 39 clues hidden around the world will reveal the family's secret, but no one has been able to assemble them. Now the clues race is on, and young Amy and Dan must decide what's important: hunting clues or uncovering what REALLY happened to their parents. .Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
Discussion en coursAucunCouvertures populaires
Google Books — Chargement... GenresClassification décimale de Melvil (CDD)813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyClassification de la Bibliothèque du CongrèsÉvaluationMoyenne:
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This was a quick read designed to leave you hungry for more. Amy and Dan, along with their trusty, trilingual babysitter Nellie, travel to Philadelphia and Paris in pursuit of some unknown treasure. There are plenty of cliches here, along with a good dose of history, but it's fun stuff. It's like the Da Vinci Code with a bit of Amazing Race thrown in. There are the usual Harry-Potter-esque tropes too: a sorting of characters based on personality stereotypes (in this case, the four branches of the Cahill family), parentless children trying to figure out who their parents were and what their destinies are, and a Snape-ish character in William McIntyre (will he help Dan and Amy or is he a bad guy?).
You have to suspend a lot of disbelief to get into this, (for example, it's hard to believe that family members would really be so quick to try to kill each other, especially when so many of them are too young to even drive), but, again, pretty fun. ( )