David Kirk is the creator of children's books that follow the character Miss Spider. Before writing books, he made colorful toys that were sold in hand-painted boxes. He was urged to write children's books when his toys caught the interest of a book packager. It wasn't difficult to figure out what he would use as characters in his stories: his daughter, Violet, had a liking for bugs. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_K...
Librarian Note: There is more than one author in the Goodreads database with this name.
The robots are just like people except they're robots. They apparently eat 3 meals a day (the story explicitly mentions a breakfast and a supper equivalent). They go to bed at night. They go to school.
The father is an explorer, off looking for a mythical energy source.
The boy loves space ships. During a school trip, he accidentally-on-purpose launches himself out into space (can I say something about the bad engineering of both the space ship and the spaceport that allowed this to happen?). His ship eventually crashes into a planet. He survives. Out of boredom, he turns his spaceship into animals matching a Noah's ark toy he had.
Eventually his dad also crashes into the planet (what? why would his dad crash? how did his dad find him?).
They accidentally find the mythological source of endless energy and fly home (I *think* in one of the animals the boy created -- it's kind of unclear to me).
It just leaves too many questions and has too many holes.
Nova's Ark is a wholesome story about a curious, adventure-seeking young robot boy named Nova who finds himself in outer space all alone. He is distraught waiting for someone to find him, until he decides to teach himself how to fly the ship he accidentally launched into space. After awhile, Nova is marooned on an unknown planet, but makes the best of his situation by reimagining his broken spaceship into an ark, when someone or something falls from the sky, crash-landing nearby. This event changes the fate that had befallen him.
Author David Kirk creates -- in a very short story -- a rich robot world with a nod to the humans who built them. Nova is a lovable character who "grows up" (just a little), giving the readers hope for the possibility of a thoughtful robot future.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
The artwork in the book is really fun, full of color and wierd 1950's looking robots and spaceships. The story concerns a little robot on a world (presumably Earth in the far, far future when robots are the only being remaining; the animals are Earth animals, yet the planet is called Roton--there is no explanation) who yearns to venture through space like his father. There is consideration here for how the robots reproduce, but they have done this for "generations."
It doesn't work as science fiction, but it does work as fantasy. And the art is true eye-candy. Wonderful!
This creative book takes a fun look at both Robots and exploration. Mr. Kirk covers both writing and illustration duties and creates an entertaining futuristic world. Curiosity and exploration are values to be encouraged. This rich yarn delivers Explore away.
The illustrations rock! I read this to my 5-year old son last night. He enjoyed it. It does have some holes in the story (as other reviewers have mentioned), but it stands on its own just fine. It is a beautiful story about sacrifice and familial love.
This kid's book has phenomenal illustrations. The colors are vibrant and I half expected characters and objects to pop off the page.
The story was ok. At times the narration seemed really choppy, as if some parts were missing. When I read the description on the back cover and discovered that this reissue features "an abridged version of the original story," that choppiness made sense. Your four-year-old might not be able to tell that this is an abridged version, but I knew something was up.
The target audience for this book is a four to six year old (I'm actually just guessing here), especially one who likes robots and adventure.
I started reading this to my 2 year old granddaughter and she lost intrest in it pretty quickly... the story didn't keep my attention either. HOWEVER, it's not a bad story. If I liked robots and technology etc then it would have caught and kept my attention. So any child that likes this type of thing would enjoy this book.
This was a very neat book, but I feel like younger children would not find it interesting. This would be better for older students, such as 3rd grade or higher. The images are great, and the color works well too. Kirk did a great job composing this book, and is very creative.
Leo loved this book. It has bright bold illustrations and a great story about a robot who likes to make robot pets. He also manages to save his father.