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Summary
Summary
Buck discovers that his favorite book series might be less fictional than he thought in this "silly, clever, [and] fun" ( BCCB ) middle grade adventure.
Harry Potter. Percy Jackson. Custard the Gnome.
Buck is a super fan of the book series, The Triumphant Gnome Syndicate. He knows all the trivia. The properties of the Troll Vanquishing Mace, and even what kind of snack Custard, the Gnome of the West, prefers. But when the book's author disappears in a cloud of smoke, and Buck's little sister disappears into a bottomless dumpster, Buck realizes that the world of gnomes and trolls might really exist. What the heck?
As it turns out, the real Custard needs Buck's help to find the Troll Vanquishing Mace. And Buck needs to find his sister. So Buck and his best friend Lizzie set off on an adventure that would make any fan's head spin. But it seems the books did not tell the whole truth about this not-so-make-believe world. Buck soon discovers that real life doesn't work like a story, and the heroes and villains might not be who they seem. Holy trolls! What's a super fan to do?
Buck is about to fulfill the ultimate fantasy: going on adventures with his favorite characters, and getting the chance to save the world. Assuming he can figure out whose side he's really on.
Author Notes
Kari Anne Holt is the author of Gnome-a-geddon , which received a starred review from Booklist , and Red Moon Rising , which Booklist said "will lasso readers and have them hoping for a sequel." She has also written several middle grade novels in verse including Rhyme Schemer and Brains for Lunch , which received a starred review in Publishers Weekly and was highlighted on the Texas Library Association's Annotated Lone Star Reading List, and Mike Stellar: Nerves of Steel , a nominee for the Connecticut Library Association Nutmeg Book Award and the Maud Hart Lovelace Award. Kari has recently contributed to the anthology, Dear Teen Me: Authors Write Letters To Their Teen Selves . Learn more about her at KAHolt.com.
Colin Jack is originally from Vancouver, Canada, and has illustrated several children's books. He currently works at DreamWorks Animation as a story artist and character designer and lives in the Bay Area with his wife and two sons.
Reviews (3)
School Library Journal Review
Gr 4-6-Fans of fantasy series will feel the pain of main character Buck and his best friend Lizzie as they impatiently wait on a very long line for the midnight release of the third book in the "Triumphant Gnome Syndicate" series. When the series's author surprises fans by first showing up at the event and then mysteriously disappearing into a cloud of smoke, Buck realizes that something odd is afoot. His little sister Willy is also a huge fan and, like most little siblings, annoys her big brother by wanting to be involved in everything he is doing-including trying to solve the disappearance of author Harold Macinaw. The plot thickens when Lizzie starts to act strangely and Willy also disappears. As Buck and Lizzie struggle to figure out what's going on, they meet an intriguing little man, who explains that Macinaw has been kidnapped and they must help rescue him. So begins this fast and action-packed story that brings the heroes to Gnomeland on a quest to find the Troll Vanquishing Mace and save Willy and Macinaw. Middle grade readers will be eager to learn more about the Troll Vanquishing Mace and solve the mystery. Fans of Angie Sage's "Magyk," J.R.R. Tolkien's "The Lord of the Rings," and C.S. Lewis's "The Chronicles of Narnia" should enjoy this and what are sure to be subsequent titles involving the plethora of characters introduced here. VERDICT Likely to prompt lively discussions on the true meaning of heroism. Recommended for libraries where fantasy featuring magical creatures is in demand.-Lisa Kropp, -Lindenhurst Memorial Library, NY © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Kirkus Review
As the title indicates, a novel that attempts to subvert and poke fun at fantasy tropes. A superfan of the series Triumphant Gnome Syndicate, Buck Rogers knows all the trivia. Buck, a white boy, and his friend Lizzie Adams, a multiracial (black/white) girl, eagerly await the midnight release of Gnome-A-Geddon, the series' newest. Compounding the excitement, author Harold Macinaw makes a surprise appearance but then suddenly disappears. The next morning, Buck and Lizzie find replicas of themselves, and none of the adults can be woken. Possibly even more alarmingly, rows of children, including Buck's little sister, Willy, march trancelike into a dumpster behind the bookstore. It turns out Flipside, the world of the books, is real. Using his comprehensive knowledge of the Triumphant Gnome Syndicate, Buck must find Macinaw and rescue Willy, but Flipside is more terrifying than he could have imagined. Like so many other fantasy protagonists, Buck is liberal with the snark, but some of the humor falls flat, as when he postulates that Lizzie might be part Troll because she's multiracial. Lizzie never rises above the role of Buck's sidekick, even though she reprimands Buck for not allowing her to fully participate in the adventure, and other characters do not rise above Buck's preconceived notions of them. In the end, the lampoon falls victim to its own sense of irony, making Buck feel like a secondary character in someone else's story and not quite a protagonist in his own. (Fantasy. 8-12) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
*Starred Review* What if the world of your beloved fantasy series turned out to be real? And what if you and your best friend were transported there to rescue the author and fulfill an ancient prophecy by saving its peaceful gnomes from evil trolls? And what if once you get there, you discover that you've been the victim of a huge con and had gotten all of it quite, quite wrong? Such is the plight of Buck Rogers, chubby, 12-year-old self-described superdork with an extra helping of nerd. When his little sister, Willy, literally disappears into a Dumpster, Buck heads to the rescue with doughty reading-buddy Lizzy. In no time, he finds himself leading (so he thinks) a search for the fabled Troll Vanquishing Mace that he alone can wield (so he supposes) as the prophesied Chosen One. But then Lizzie angrily rejects his notion that she's supposed to play the sidekick and goes off on a quest of her own. More preconceptions fall as the series' author turns out to be a villain scheming to keep the intelligent, magically enslaved trolls under gnomish thumbs. Most stunning of all, instead of being Willy's rescuer, Buck sees roles embarrassingly reversed at the climax. But Buck survives to show emotional resilience as well as an ability to learn from his mistakes, and Holt leaves him, along with readers, eager for a sequel. Final art not seen.--Peters, John Copyright 2017 Booklist
Excerpts
Excerpts
Gnome-a-geddon Lizzie is glowing. And when I say that, I don't mean her cheeks are rosy and her skin is dewy and all that junk, I mean she's actually glowing. Her lips are splattered with the guts of a green glow bracelet, and there are glowing streaks of purple and pink and green on her teeth, on her cheeks, in her hair, and inside her ears. It looks like a unicorn threw up on her face. Which is exactly what I tell her. "Even with unicorn barf on me, I look better than you do. What were you thinking, Buck?" She pokes my cheek with her finger and makes her badger face. It's the one where she scrunches up her nose so that her front two teeth stick out in obvious disgust. I swat away her finger. She's totally ruining my makeup. Excerpted from Gnome-A-geddon by K. A. Holt All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.