<< 1 >>
Rating:  Summary: One of the new classic series for children Review: A truly great series. I first read it was I was probably 11 or 12 (which is the target-audience). I loved them. I have read them probably 5 or 6 times. Coville is an excellent writer, but this will be one of his crowning achievements in the genre of children's literature. Now I am twenty. I pulled out my old dusty copies of these works, and as soon as I finish Hunt for the Autumn Clowns I'm going to take a quick trip down memory lane with this serious (before I tackle the Potter books and R. Jordan). This is a very well-constructed series. The first book is an absolute classic. Although the others are excellent, just like Lion, Witch, Wardrobe this will be the one everyone thinks of when they think of the series. It has classic elements of an alien trying to kidnap people to do experiments and testing on. Save in this (if I remember correctly) you don't know WHY he wants the people, or kids. Then we go to the second, My Teacher Fried My Brains. A very lovable sequel, it is here we get into the mind of Duncan Dougal, the bully in the first book. We find "poots", a Medusa-like alien, and machine that makes you perceive music/TV in yr head and makes you a zillion times smarter (the zillion being a rough estimate, of course ;)). And it seems, perhaps, there is something more to the aliens then at first they thought. Won't give any spoilers away, so don't worry. But there is a nice little surprise at the end. Then we get to the third volume, My Teacher Glows in the Dark. My personal favorite, it's set on the spaceship New Jersey. It introduced all sorts of nice imagery, and concepts I have used in my own writings (The URAT. Surgically installed device, so you can understand the other creatures on board. Though not by device, I have used similar methods to cross over the language barrier when I want to have different species get together in my own stories for any suspended period of time). We get to meet the lovable Hoo-Lan, who is quite the doll. It is set entirely on the ship (with the exception of an instance where they go onto another planet), as state up above, so we get to see fascinating alien environments. Then we get to the fourth, My Teacher Flunked the Planet. It is here the series as a whole climaxes. It is the darkest story of the lot, primarily because of its subject matter is a lot denser and much more real in the sense of tragedy than the other three stories. The others build up to this moment. From a writer's standpoint, this is a most excellent case or instance of carefully crafted and wrought stories for children. It is here Coville ties up the loose ends (and there are quite a few). The ending is a very interesting concept or perception of humanity. Although I am a Christian, and I do not agree with the whole evolution idea, for the sake of the story it worked. It is much more of a sentimental favorite for me, because I grew up reading (and reading and reading and reading) these four volumes. As I said, my personal favorite is the third story. The only problem with this one is it is heavily dependent on the others three books to carry the story. My Teacher is an Alien, which was never intended for a series, is the most stand alone of all the books. It has the most distinct feel of a modern children's classic.* But, unlike The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe (for me), this is as good as the rest of them. Then the publishers wanted more because it turned out to be an unexpected hit. So he wrote the second. It is stand alone - to a point. You can tell there is more coming, and the issue is not resolved. Then the third one just exaggerates that feeling. Its like Act I builds and sets the rules. It doesn't need another thing to be complete. It is complete in sense it is self-contained. Act II further complicates Act I, and hints at what is to be in Act III. But to be complete, it needs Act III. Act III comes along. Originally, according to the preface in the Collector's edition, it was supposed to be a trilogy, but the story was too long, so he divided up into two parts. Act III in this instances just builds and intensifies the need for completion. It depends on the two acts before it to build up to it, and then it depends on Act IV to complete it. Act IV is the completion. (Much of what I say here echoes what George Lucas said of Star Wars in the interview released with them when they rereleased the Star Wars original edition. ESB is the best in that series, but, just like Book 2 and 3 in this series, need RoJ to be completed, and is not a stand alone film). * (When I say a classic feel, its just like The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe. All the Narnia books are classics and are most excellent [scary, now I'm sounding like Bill and Ted - yike!], but LWW has the most classic feel of them all, and, btw, is my least favorite of the series. It has some classic scenes, especially Tumnus the Faun standing in the wood with parcels and an umbrella. But overall, the Christianity is way too explicit. I like, if you are using fantasy as a vehicle to express Christianity, not to be beat over the head with it, which is what I feel Lewis did with Aslan and the Stone Table. I love Narnia, and LWW is good, but the others are so MUCH better!) Narnia is better than this, however, and most children's fiction for that matter.
Rating:  Summary: This Book is Soo Cool! Review: Coville's books have a unique charm that makes people wish to read them for years after they've passed the suggested age limit. The title makes it sound like a fifties B movie, but My Teacher is an Alien is far from that. This story, which starts off the quadrilogy (in which ordinary, typical middle school children find themselves trying to save the earth) contains believeable characters, vivid imagery, and a fresh perspective on young reactions to alien invaders.
Rating:  Summary: A good book, save for the cover illustrations, Review: I must admit ... for years now I have been past the children's books, but the only thing that drives me back is Coville. He is a good writer. This series is one of my favs. In the first instalment of the My Teacher series, Coville introduces the alien Broxholm and how they attempt to unmask him. This one stands up good on its own. So does the next book. I've actually read this series 4 or 5 times. My chief complain is the illustrations on the front. It works good for the first one, that hostile alien deal. The others are more co-operation between aliens (save Kreblim). But they still have them like they're evil and its the aliens against the humans. That is my chief complaint against it. Coville has down a wonderful job with a good plot. This book does the best job of being able to stand independatly from the others. You can read it and not feel yr missing a lot. The others (espically the third one, which is my favorite) really rely on the next to take up ! where the other left off.
Rating:  Summary: My Teacher IS an Alien Review: I read this book, and it's great for anyone who like Science Fiction.It's about these kids who get a substitute teacher. One of the kids suspects the sub and sneaks into his house only to see him "take off his face" and reveal an ugly alien. The kid tells another kid and they sneak in again together only to see their REAL teacher (before the sub) in a forcefield, and the teacher tells the kids that the alien is going to kidnap some kids in THE kids class. get it? ok. great. that's all!
Rating:  Summary: [My Teachers is an Alien] Review: My Teachers is an Alien The book I read was My Teacher is an Alien. The story starts of with a new school year. Susan is a normal girl that just wants to learn and Peter who reads and reads and reads. He likes to read comics mostly about aliens so Susan came up and read one of his comics. When they get to class hey realize that they have a sub. Susan gets extremely upset because she loves her teacher a lot. When she finds out her teacher was captured and her sub is an alien she gets hysterical. Susan is a very sweet and innocent girl. Peter is a weird geeky boy that dreams of being captured by aliens. The problem for Susan is that first her teacher is an alien. Also her best friend Peter is in great danger. And last but not least her teacher is in some kind of trance and is hypnotized. I would definitely recommend his book to someone who likes science fiction. Also for people who like mystery stories.
Rating:  Summary: [ w/Sabrina's collaboration] A book that you can't put down. Review: The first time I read the book, it seemed a little boring until I got to the middle of the first chapter. After that, It was really interesting and I could't put the book down. I highly recommend you read the book or else you're missing on a very good book.
I guarantee that once you start reading this book, you won't be able to put it down.
Rating:  Summary: This is the greatest Sci-Fi book I have ever read! Review: This book is about a girl who's teacher diappears when they come back from spring break. This new teacher is really strange. She follows him home from school one day. When she goes there she hears a screaming noise from inside. She goes in to see what it is. She finds out it is him playing this weird music. He grabs his ears and rips of his face. She is horrified to see that his real face is green. She scoots out of his house before he sees her. She tells her friend ,Peter, about it and he helps her reveal that he is really an alien. This is a great book for young children that like to read Sci-Fi books. It is great for anyone who doesn't really care for it because it has nothing grose in it, just lots of suspence.
Rating:  Summary: An Awesome Alien Adventure! Review: This is the first in a four-book series that I just feel compelled to rave about. I love it, my six year old daughter loves it, and my nine year old son loves it -- not an easy accomplishment. The series is very slightly scary, but not too much for my kids, who do not like scary books -- and that slight scare is part of the entertainment. They deal with bad relationships between parents and kids, bullying issues and redemption, education, poverty, war, injustice, existential angst, everything! in a way that make us want more, more, more!
Rating:  Summary: An engaging story that should delight many a young reader Review: When I come across a title such as this, I just have to take a look at the book for myself; when I find that there are three additional books forming a whole series based on the whole alien teacher concept, I have to read them all; I don't care if it's classified as "children's literature" because, to be frank, there are a lot of good "children's literature" books out there these days. With books such as this, by authors as engaging and gifted as Bruce Coville, aimed primarily at a fourth to sixth grade reading audience, it is harden to imagine that many kids just do not have any interest in reading. Heck, I'm an adult, and I loved this book. It's neither too long nor too short, puts believable characters in an extraordinary situation, mixes humor with warmth and intelligence, and - in case you missed it - features a substitute teacher who is in fact a reptilian alien in disguise. What's not to like here? This first person story is told by Susan Simmons, your ordinary sixth grader. She has been looking forward to the final weeks of the school year because her teacher, Ms. Schwartz, is going to have the children stage a play. She is soon shocked to learn that Ms. Schwartz is not coming back; to make matters worse, the new teacher, Mr. Smith, has no interest in staging plays or teaching in his predecessor's unconventional but highly effective (i.e., fun) style. Susan doesn't like Mr. Smith at all, and like many a kid before her eventually finds herself in a bind thanks to a note she wrote in class. In her attempt to get the note back, she discovers that Mr. Smith is actually an alien and that he has come here to take five students back with him to wherever he came from. What's a girl to do? No adult would ever believe her, and most kids would think she was joking. She turns to Peter, a smart but unmotivated boy who eats, lives, and breathes science fiction. He doesn't exactly buy her story at first, but together they find enough evidence to convince him that she is telling the truth. Now all they have to do is find and save Ms. Schwartz, avoid being carried off into space by Mr. Smith, and somehow prove to even the most skeptical of adults that "we are not alone." This book isn't scary at all, but there are a couple of suspenseful scenes involving the children snooping around in potentially dangerous places. Susan and Peter make for engaging characters, especially Susan; we see her having to deal with the reality of staying out of trouble, preparing for a big piccolo solo in the school concert, and forging a real friendship with Peter, on top of worrying herself sick over her big secret and struggling to come up with a plan of action. This really is an engaging, fast-paced science fiction tale that should spark the imagination of many a young reader.
<< 1 >>
|