"The Hero of the Five Points" is a rollicking short adventure set in 1853 in the world of the League of Seven fantasy series for middle-grade readers by acclaimed author Alan Gratz. Grab your aether pistol and your favorite stovepipe hat and join Dalton Dent as he tracks down the foul creature known as Mose. At the publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management software (DRM) applied.
Alan Gratz is the bestselling author of a number of novels for young readers. His 2017 novel Refugee has spent more than two years on the New York Times bestseller list, and is the winner of 14 state awards. Its other accolades include the Sydney Taylor Book Award, the National Jewish Book Award, the Cybils Middle Grade Fiction Award, a Charlotte Huck Award Honor, and a Malka Penn Award for Human Rights Honor. Refugee was also a Global Read Aloud Book for 2018.
Alan’s novel Grenade debuted at number three on the New York Times bestseller list, and his most recent book, Allies, debuted at number two on the list and received four starred reviews. His other books include Prisoner B-3087, which was a YALSA Best Fiction for Young Readers pick and winner of eight state awards; Projekt 1065, a Kirkus Best Middle Grade Book of 2016 and winner of five state awards; Code of Honor, a YALSA Quick Pick for Young Readers; and Ban This Book, which was featured by Whoopi Goldberg on The View.
Alan has traveled extensively to talk about his books, appearing at schools and book festivals in 39 states and a half-dozen countries, including Brazil, Canada, China, Indonesia, Japan, and Switzerland, and has been a Writer in Residence at Tokyo’s American School in Japan, the James Thurber House in Columbus, Ohio, and the Jakarta Intercultural School in Indonesia.
Alan was born and raised in Knoxville, Tennessee, home of the 1982 World’s Fair. After a carefree but humid childhood, Alan attended the University of Tennessee, where he earned a College Scholars degree with a specialization in creative writing, and, later, a Master’s degree in English education. He now lives with his family in Asheville, North Carolina, where he enjoys playing games, eating pizza, and, perhaps not too surprisingly, reading books.
this was a cute little story that i enjoyed. i enjoyed the resolution and how the Mangle ended up being something no one had expected, that was really sweet.
Finally found that you can read this online on the authors website. Great little story about Archie's parents and what it means to deal with mangle spawn without powers
They say you can't judge a book by its cover, and they are correct. The illustration (click the link to see the whole image) by Rednose Studio is amazing and absolutely made me want to read this story, but this short story is a mess.
Hero of the Five Points is set in New Rome (alternate New York) in the Five Points region of Mannahatta (Manhattan) with a culture and political climate identical to Martin Scorsese's Gangs of New York. In this universe the Americas had at some point been under the control of the Romans and their ruins establish the foundation of the cities in a way similar to what you might find Europe. However Europe and the Americas no longer have communication or trade and the First Nations have a more established cultural foothold in this version of the United Nations of America. With characters lifted roughly from the film, our protagonist, Dalton Dent infiltrates the Dead Rabbits lead by Kit Burns, who is a more thuggish Bill the Butcher, and aided by the also undercover Hellcat Maggie.
The forward tells us it is 1853, which is peculiar. In this story Thomas Edison is an old and prosperous man, which of course he would only be 6 years old in our timeline. Lektricity (ahem, electricity) has come and gone with the science of the day taking a steampunk flare featuring dirigibles, steam power (including steam-powered robots with AI), but not ballistics, instead featuring ray guns. The timeline and logic is a mess. Also in the forward it tells us this short story is from the world of the League of Seven series for middle grade readers, but even pre-teens can do a simple to search to figure out when Edison was born. Integrating actual historical places and figures then not establishing a cursory understanding of their actual characteristics reflects the laziness of the writing in general. There is a lot of wild fantastical world building which must be explored in League of Seven because it is simply distracting here.
In an alternate United States, a secret agent infiltrates a gang of street urchins to hunt down a monster. Sounds exciting, right? Unfortunately, the finished product is decidedly less so.
I love the idea of steampunk. The cosplay is amazing and I'm a sucker for the latest "Here's Your Favorite Superhero Steampunk Style!" artwork. Steampunk fiction has not impressed me nearly as much. It's always very trope-y, but often there's next to no explanation for why the world is this way. There'll be clockwork sentient automatons, zeppelins, improbable lightning guns and none of this gets explained. This story has all of that, scattered across a series of ultra-violent gang warfare set pieces. Then we learn our main character is a secret agent working for a society that protects the world from monsters that eat electricity (I have no recollection of how to spell the ridiculous cutesy alternate spelling for electricity this world uses), inspired ancient legends, and periodically return to destroy human civilization. On top of all that, the story is set in an alternate United States formed from various Native American tribes and European settlers. There isn't much in the way of details on how that happened in the story, so I'm going to assume the Native Americans invented death rays and robots back before Columbus invaded. It's just too much stuff going on in a thirty page story. Just pick a setting already and quit trying to kitchen sink it.
The incredibly jumbled, yet still fairly dull story might have squeaked by with a two star rating though until I hit a huge jump the shark moment toward the end. Thomas Edison, all around jerk, saboteur, animal torturer, and invention-thief, appears as a psychopathic mad scientist who wants to create some sort of Dr. Moreau-style race of monster men. Edison was not a nice guy, but the level of nerd rage it requires to write a long dead jerk into your story as a child-murderer is just kind of laughable. This is like the people who write fanfiction about their favorite TV shows and make the love interest they don't like into a raging maniac.
"The Hero of the Five Points" is a short adventure set in 1853 in the world of the League of Seven fantasy series. I usually stay away from "short story set in the world of" novels, they tend to be quite bad. I am happy to have read this one though, it was entertaining and fun. It is the story of Dalton Dent as he tracks down the foul creature known as Mose.
I'd give this a 4.5 if I could. It's a steam-punky alt-history that reads like a cross between a children's book and a violent gang study. It's a very fun short story.
I liked trying to work out the connection between this story and the characters in the League of Seven series, but I didn't quite enjoy this as much as I've enjoyed the books.