Available:*
Library | Call Number | Status |
---|---|---|
Searching... Hardwood Creek Library (Forest Lake) | J FICTION REY | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Oakdale Library | J FICTION REY | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Park Grove Library (Cottage Grove) | J FICTION REY | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... R.H. Stafford Library (Woodbury) | J FICTION REY | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Stillwater Public Library | J FICTION REY | Searching... Unknown |
Bound With These Titles
On Order
Summary
Summary
New York Times best-selling author Aaron Reynolds delivers an " entertainingly spooky romp" ( Publishers Weekly , starred review) about Rex Dexter, who is itching to have a dog . . . but ends up with a pet chicken. One hour and fourteen minutes later, the chicken is dead (by a steamroller), Rex is cursed (by the Grim Reaper), and wild animals are haunting Rex's room (hounding him for answers). Even his best friend Darvish is not going to believe this, and that kid believes everything!
Rex's uninvited ghostly guests are a chatty, messy bunch. And they need Rex to solve their mysterious deadly departures from the Middling Falls Zoo before it happens again. But how?
Author Notes
Aaron Reynolds is a New York Times best-selling author and has written many highly acclaimed books for kids, including DUDE! , Creepy Pair of Underwear , Caveboy Dave , and the Caldecott Honor-winning Creepy Carrots . Aaron lives in Chicago with his wife, two kids, four cats, and anywhere between zero and ten goldfish, depending on the day.
Reviews (4)
Publisher's Weekly Review
When avid dog lover Rex Dexter, a sixth grader, begs for one--"a chocolate Labrador. That's a proper pet"--for his birthday, he doesn't expect his parents to get him a chicken as a "practice pet." Nor does he expect said chicken to be promptly run over by a steamroller, shortly after Rex loses a carnival game called The Grim Reaper, one that promises a curse. Nor the chicken's ghost to turn up in his bedroom calling him "bestie." More ghosts appear: of the rhino that burned to death at the local zoo, of a dead gorilla with a shark attached to its rear. Rex has become a lightning rod for dead animals, and it's clear that something sinister is happening at the zoo. Now he, his spectral companions, and his best friend, Darvish, must get to the heart of the matter before further animals meet similarly dismal fates. In this entertainingly spooky romp, Reynolds (Dude!) tempers his morbid premise with the absurdity of Rex's situation, the ghostly entourage's distinct personalities, and a hilarious, simultaneously formal and sarcastic, narrative voice. Ages 8--12. Agent: Jodi Reamer, Writers House. (Apr.)
Booklist Review
As the name of the town suggests, life in Middlington Falls is unremarkable. That is, until Rex Dexter tangles with a wish-granting grim reaper, in the form of a vintage arcade game. Unfortunately, Rex loses the game, and instead of walking away with a real live pet (please be a chocolate Lab!), he is cursed with the ability to see and speak to dead animals--including his rooster "practice pet," which just got flattened in the parking lot. Narrating with unchecked confidence and sarcasm, Rex comes to understand that the incorporeal zoo animals now appearing in his bedroom--a charred rhino, a drowned gorilla, a squashed elephant, and a zapped panda--need his help to solve the mystery of their untimely deaths. Picture-book author Reynolds brings his knack for off-kilter comedy to his first novel in a gleefully entertaining fashion. While Rex recklessly leads with self-ascribed "charm," he is balanced by his intelligent, good-natured friend Darvish. The zany animal cast adds to the fun of this series starter, perfect for fans of Stuart Gibbs' FunJungle mysteries.
School Library Journal Review
Gr 3--6--Sixth-grader Rex Dexter desperately wants a dog, but his parents have deemed him too irresponsible. When he loses an old-fashioned Grim Reaper carnival game, he is cursed with the ability to see and communicate with dead animals who passed away with unfinished business. The first one he sees is his own pet chicken, which died moments before in a steamroller accident while Rex wasn't paying attention. Soon after, he starts seeing the ghosts of animals from a local zoo, all of whom died under strange circumstances. Rex must solve the mystery of who is killing off rare animals so that the victims can move on to the afterlife. And if he does, maybe he can convince his parents that he is responsible enough to own a dog, too. Hapless Rex follows in the footsteps of characters like Timmy Failure, who think they are much cleverer than they actually are. His hijinks will amuse those who enjoy slapstick humor just a little on the dark side. The mystery has a twist ending that will surprise and satisfy readers who thought they knew what was coming. VERDICT Purchase where funny books are popular--that's everywhere, right?--Misti Tidman, Mansfield/Richland County Public Library, OH
Kirkus Review
Haunted by the ghosts of dead pets, a kid must right their wrongs.All sixth grader Rex wants is a "real-live" pet of his own-preferably a chocolate Labrador. Everyone he knows has a pet. His best friend, Darvish, a "pet hoarder," has four-maybe five. In answer to Rex's constant pleading, his parents give him a "practice pet": a chicken. One hour and 14 minutes after the chicken enters Rex's life, it becomes a real-dead pet. Things go from bad to worse when, after losing a mysterious carnival game called The Reaper's Curse he finds on the sidewalk, Rex can not only suddenly see the ghosts of dead animals, but speak to and understand them. The chicken-Drumstick-is the first of many to communicate with Rex. As a de facto animal "afterlife errand boy," can Rex help these ghosts rest in peace? Reynolds' new series debut is nonstop comedy, poking fun at everything from animal rights groups to the education system. Rex's first-person narration-heavily unreliable and hyperbolic-smartly utilizes direct address to implicate readers in the ridiculous plot. Several jokes skirt the edges of adult taste, with instances of potty humor that should especially delight kids. Most of the human characters are white by default; Darvish is Pakistani American.Laugh-out-loud ludicrousness.Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.