The Gadget Book Review
Terron Robey
In the book, The Gadget, written by Paul Zindel, a remarkable story is told about the life of a teenage boy in the early 1940s. Steven, thirteen years old at the tim, moves away from his family in rough WWII effected Europe to an almost uncharted town near Los Alamos, New Mexico, with his father who is a physicist. His father is working on top secret project for the United States government to not only assist in the ending of World War II, but complete it. This action-filled adventure will keep you guessing until the end. What is the big project his father is working on? Who can he trust? Who will survive the extremely dangerous and lucrative war effort? Anyone who has ever asked too many questions, or wandered about American history, will be entertained until the very end.
I personally really enjoyed this book. I've always been interested in World War II history. The SS, The Nazi Party, Nuclear Fission, Berlin, Europe, and post-WWII Japan, have always been remembered as the beginning and ending key elements of WWII and play a huge part in this book. I asked a few questions while reading, which all have their own interesting answers. A lot of action and suspense are showed in this masterpiece of the ending of WWII that is accompanied with shocking mystery.
In the book, The Gadget, author Paul Zindel tells a realistic fictional story about a thirteen year-old boy named Steven Orr, who lives in early 1940's London, England. After Steven's brother Jackson dies from airplane bombings over their house, his mother father decide that it would be best if he moved with his father to his new job. His father, who is a physicist, is assigned to a top secret project, with other talented scientists near Los Alamos, New Mexico, involving the nuclear bomb that will hopefully end the war. Once Steven arrives, he soon realizes how lucrative this could be for the USA and how they have kept it so secret. The houses, everyone must have an individual P.O. Box address where they can pick up mail and other belongings. Steven is actually treated more special than others by the workers, soldiers, and guards because he resides in “Bathtub Row”, which is where all the doctors and scientists live. On his first day of school, he meets a young man just a few years older than him named Alexei. Alexei lives off the base a few hundred yards away but still attends base activities because his father supplies guard dogs to the guards at the base. Alexei and Steven quickly become best friends on and off base, with nothing else to do. But, Steven's maid Sonya does not trust Alexei because he is Russian, many foreigners were questioned as spies during this time.
Paul Zindel has written other works that consist of action with mystery behind it to keep the reader guessing until the end. The author's purpose behind this masterpiece is to tell the life of a teenage boy in WWII and inform us on key events and the important individuals that led to the ending of WWII. Many children had to make sacrifices and hard decisions in the 1940s because of the war. I would recommend this book to anyone who wants to read a very interesting story, and learn more about American history in a short, fast-paced amount of time.