Source of book: Audiobook from the library
This is a short, comedic book by Gary Paulsen. We have
enjoyed a variety of his other books. Here is the list:
***
This book is, like others of his short, humorous books, not
particularly deep, but just light entertainment. Of the ones we have read, this
is probably the fluffiest, although it does have an interesting premise.
The idea is that someone found a way to bring holograms of
things back from the past, which has led to, among other things, a total
revision of the history curriculum. The problem is that eventually, strange
things start happening to Dorso (the narrator) and Frank (his comedic wingman.)
First, they are fairly harmless, like Dorso’s locker at school being filled up
with dead rats - who mysteriously disappear a minute later. But eventually,
they get serious, with Dorso and Frank getting suddenly transported to the past
- and nearly getting killed. It turns out that someone - two someones actually
- have hacked time, so to speak, and are playing a deadly game with time
travel. (As in, can one of them alter history and violate the “grandfather paradox”
before the other can set it right and prevent dire consequences up to and
including the annihilation of the universe.) The problem for Dorso and Frank is
that they have no idea what is going on or how they got involved. Or, for that
matter, how to stop it, particularly since the cyber-authorities don’t believe
them.
Things of note about this book: First, I think Paulson is
excellent at setting the stage for a complicated technology without using too
much space. He has a lot to do, and he does it gradually through the first few
chapters - but he does it clearly and concisely. The entire book is all of two
and a half hours of audiobook, so it is short. Paulsen can’t waste time on
wordy descriptions, and has to be frugal.
Second, Paulsen uses the two essential Jr. High sources of
humor: gross stuff, and nude girls. The book starts out with the discovery of
an old medical cadaver in Dorso’s locker and a girl who faints at the smell.
There is more of the same sort of stuff throughout. Because stinky stuff is
funny. Just ask my younger kids.
The other running gag is that Frank keeps trying to
circumvent the censorship of the time-web in order to see naked women. For
“research,” of course.
As with all Paulsen books, it is tightly plotted, internally
consistent, and modest in length. I didn’t find it quite as funny as, say, Masters of Disaster, which has comedic
timing down to an art. But it was a diverting audiobook for our drive, and made
the younger kids laugh. It is pretty hard to go wrong with Paulsen.
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