Synopses & Reviews
Twelve-year-old Zack Delacruz has remained happily unnoticed at his middle schoolandmdash;until now. He takes the advice he hears at an assembly and stands up to the class bully. Somehow this uncharacteristic behavior gets Zack labeled a leader and put in charge of the sixth-grade dance fundraiser with none other than the bully himself! Middle school was starting out hard enough for Zack without this extra pressure and attention. His situation goes from bad to worse when Zack learns that his best salesperson for the chocolate bar fundraiser has been EATING, not selling, her candy bars. The mayhem continues with a hilarious andldquo;intervention,andrdquo; a desperate effort to raise money, a scary meeting with the principal, and even water balloons filled with pee. Zack never wanted to be the class hero, but with the hopes of the entire sixth grade on the line, can he save the day?
Review
“Stuart Horten, 10, is back for a second mysterious adventure.. . .it's still rollicking good fun and often engagingly suspenseful, perfect for a quick read or entertaining read-aloud.” --
Kirkus Reviews"Children will delight in Stuart's adventures, which are infused with humor, and clamor for the next installment.” -- School Library Journal
Review
“Stuart Horten, 10, is back for a second mysterious adventure.. . .it's still rollicking good fun and often engagingly suspenseful, perfect for a quick read or entertaining read-aloud.” --
Kirkus Reviews"Children will delight in Stuart's adventures-which are infused with humor, and clamor for the next installment.” -- School Library Journal “Evans does a clever job of getting all that happened in Horten's Miraculous Mechanisms (2012) into the first couple of pages of this sequel, so readers can get the backstory out of the way and start the new adventure. And adventure it is. Stuart Horten, who found his great-uncle Tony's magic tricks in the previous book, now must use those tricks to locate his will. Once again there are plenty of clues to figure out, puzzles to solve, and codes to break. The fun is enhanced when May and June, along with sister April, join the search. Old and new fans will find this good Booklist
Review
andldquo;Zack is a relatable narrator and embodies the middle school experience. The steady pace makes this novel a solid pick for reluctant readers.andrdquo; andmdash;
School Library Journal andldquo;Zack . . . is a sympathetic narrator, and Anderson spiritedly renders the voices and personalities of preteens, many of Mexican descent, in a blue-collar section of San Antonio, Tex. . . . [A] pleasantly satisfying finish.andrdquo; andmdash;Publishers Weekly
Synopsis
This magical follow-up to Horten's Miraculous Mechanisms continues Stuart's amazing adventures--with more enchantment, more surprises, and more thrills. When we last left 10-year-old Stuart, he had just recovered his great-uncle Tony's long-lost magic workshop. Now all the priceless tricks are on display in the Beeton Museum--and Stuart is junior curator of the exhibit! But another mystery awaits Stuart: Where did the great magician hide his will? Only by entering the magic world of the workshop can he find the answer. But as the mechanisms whisk him off on increasingly incredible adventures, the puzzles become harder and harder to solve…and the stakes higher. With even more page-turning action, this second book in the exciting middle-grade series does a magic trick of its own: it's even better than the first!
Synopsis
Zack Delacruz is unnoticed at his middle schoolandmdash;and thatandrsquo;s just the way he likes it. But a school assembly, a typhoon of spit, and an uncharacteristic moment of bravery are all it takes to change everything. Suddenly Zack is in charge of the class fundraiser. Worse, his partner is the schoolandrsquo;s biggest bully! If they donandrsquo;t sell all the chocolate bars, there will be no dance for the sixth grade. and#160;Zack never wanted to be a hero, but with his classmatesandrsquo; hopes on the line, can he save the day?
About the Author
Lissa Evans's route to children's fiction author is perhaps as roundabout as Stuart's adventures in Beeton. After a brief career as a doctor of medicine and then in stand-up comedy, Lissa became a comedy producer, first in radio and then in television, before turning to writing. Her first middle grade novel featuring young Stuart, Horten's Miraculous Mechanisms, was short-listed for the Carnegie Medal, the Costa Book Awards, and UK Literacy Association's Children's Book Award. It was also long-listed for the Guardian Children's Fiction Prize and the Branford Boase Award. Lissa lives with her family in North London.