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Sophomore Undercover by Ben Esch β€” book cover

Sophomore Undercover

by Ben Esch
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Overview

James Bond is on a much-needed vacation in Mexico at the home of ex-flying ace Jack Stone. But his holiday is cut short when a hurricane hits. As the storm ravages the community, a gang of thieves lies in ambush they want Stone's safe, and will kill for its contents. Stone's children, Precious and JJ, are kidnapped, and James must embark on a perilous chase through the jungle to rescue them and retrieve the stolen items. The clues ultimately lead him to the island of Lagrimas Negras, a haven for deadly criminals, controlled by the ruthless El Huracn.
James will have to use all of his instincts and cunning if he's going to outwit El Huracn and escape with his life. But the only way off the island is through a treacherous maze, La Avenida de la Muerte the Avenue of Death.
On this terrifying trail of greed and betrayal, only danger is guaranteedsurvival is not.

Synopsis

WHO: Dixie Nguyen (no, not "Nig Goo Yun") a.k.a. Pixie Dick (to the large, cruel, and athletically gifted) a.k.a. the lead (and only) reporter for the school newspaper

WHAT: A chance for Dixie to scoop the biggest drug scandal in the history of high school athletics—provided that he can stay out of juvenile hall, the hospital, and new age therapy long enough to piece the story together

WHEN: Homecoming week

WHERE: Stilton, California

Population: 5,864

Vietnamese Population: Dixie Nguyen

HOW: Using the power of investigative reporting—along with a little help from a cheerleader-turned-goth, a menopausal journalism teacher, and maybe even the hippie school counselor, nicknamed Huggy Bear

WHY: Because the Pulitzer would look pretty sweet on a college application

Publishers Weekly

This irreverent debut follows 14-year-old Dixie Nguyen, the only Vietnamese person in his California small town (he's adopted), a social outcast and wannabe journalist. The lone reporter for his high school paper, Dixie glimpses one of the jocks in the locker room receiving an injection and finally has something newsworthy to write about. Launching his own crazy, convoluted investigation, Dixie uncovers a conspiracy involving drugs made in Canada and imported to the U.S. under cover of a pharmaceutical company, then sold to a mysterious albino student who passes them on to the school's perpetually losing football team. The characterizations match the over-the-top plotting; for example, the school counselor asks to be called Huggy Bear. Though it's hard to keep track of the ridiculous connections Dixie makes, his investigation will be funny and compelling to readers who like Esch's in-your-face humor (Dixie's first adoptive father was "a figurative 'bleeding heart' Berkeley professor, who became a literal bleeding heart Berkeley professor after a car crash two months into the adoption experiment"). Ages 14-up. (Feb.)

Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

About the Author, Ben Esch

Charlie Higson is an acclaimed comedy writer, producer, actor, and genuine Bond aficionado. He is the author of the adult thrillers, Full Whack and King of the Ants, as well as the internationally best-selling Young Bond series: SilverFin, Blood Fever, and Double or Die. He lives in London.

Reviews

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

This irreverent debut follows 14-year-old Dixie Nguyen, the only Vietnamese person in his California small town (he's adopted), a social outcast and wannabe journalist. The lone reporter for his high school paper, Dixie glimpses one of the jocks in the locker room receiving an injection and finally has something newsworthy to write about. Launching his own crazy, convoluted investigation, Dixie uncovers a conspiracy involving drugs made in Canada and imported to the U.S. under cover of a pharmaceutical company, then sold to a mysterious albino student who passes them on to the school's perpetually losing football team. The characterizations match the over-the-top plotting; for example, the school counselor asks to be called Huggy Bear. Though it's hard to keep track of the ridiculous connections Dixie makes, his investigation will be funny and compelling to readers who like Esch's in-your-face humor (Dixie's first adoptive father was "a figurative 'bleeding heart' Berkeley professor, who became a literal bleeding heart Berkeley professor after a car crash two months into the adoption experiment"). Ages 14-up. (Feb.)

Copyright Β© Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Children's Literature - Jeanna Sciarrotta

A high-school sophomore goes undercover to scoop the underground drug use by the school football team. As the only reporter for the school newspaper, Dixie Nyguyen takes it upon himself to piece together the not too reliable clues he discovers. Author, Ben Esch, falls short of creating a believable high school caste system and fumbles with cliches of jock-style bullies and swirlies in the bathroom toilet. While the content, and at times, too graphic locker room descriptions, are intended for the socially unaccepted teenage boyβ€”the situations are too far fetched to give this story any credibility with the average student. Reviewer: Jeanna Sciarrotta

Kirkus Reviews

Fourteen-year-old Stilton High sophomore Dixie Nguyen is the only student who works on the school paper. He's sure he's found the scoop of a lifetime when he catches a member of the football team shooting up in the locker room, but it's Dixie who gets busted for possession after a disastrous run-in with a school security guard. Dixie spends his week of in-school suspension investigating to clear his name with the help of a new friend, Goth-girl Brynn. From a cringe-inducingly creepy relationship with the newspaper's faculty adviser to a whiskey-soaked undercover visit to a bar to his nude accusations at the Homecoming dance, Dixie stumbles his way through the most downright pathetic investigation imaginable. If any of this sounds as if it might induce a laugh of any kind other than uncomfortable, it won't. Esch's debut is a string of embarrassingly unfunny one-liners (most of which rely on penises for their effect) larding a nonsensical plot that features a hopelessly clueless straight-A, ethnic-for-no-reason (other than to have a "funny" name) narrator surrounded by caricatures. Trying for snarky and sarcastic, this barely achieves lame; no teen will thank you for including this in your collection. (Fiction. YA)

Book Details

Published
March 22, 2011
Publisher
Hyperion Books for Children
Pages
288
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781423113058

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