A spy has infiltrated the island, and only the A.I. Gang can stop him
Some days a gang of kid geniuses just can’t win. As if it weren’t bad enough that the A.I. Gang has Sergeant Brody’s terrifying security robots crimping their activities and the mysterious Black Glove out to get them, now they’ve managed to get on the bad side of an international superspy who has secretly invaded Anza-bora Island.
Of course, a little thing like that won’t stop them from coming up with new schemes. But when Rachel talks the others into building a rocket to launch Dr. Weiskopf’s singing robot, Twerpy, on a vital space mission, it turns out that the final countdown to blastoff may also be a countdown to death.
This ebook features an illustrated personal history of Bruce Coville including rare images from the author’s collection.
I wrote elsewhere about my love for this series, and I'm glad to re-read it now and plan to read it with my own kids. The series was from the 80s and was set in a near future with a world on the brink of war, and a group of geniuses (and their genius kids) gathered on a remote South Pacific island to try to develop Artificial Intelligence. The kids try to develop their own A.I. (Operation Sherlock!), partly to solve mysteries about an apparent terrorist spy among the scientists. Anyway, there are oddities about this series (including that the original plan was for Bruce Coville to write books 1 & 4 and another author books 2 & 3, a book 2 called "The Cutlass Clue" was written, but then Coville wrote 3 & 4, and now only the Coville books are ever printed, re-labeled 1, 2, and 3 - it's weird! And now they're out of print and removed from Kindle again!). Anyway, in this one there is a robot that might be used to solve problems with satellites, so the kids build a rocket to get it into orbit, but another terrorist is trying to use the project and is willing to kill to succeed . . . Near-future sci-fi from the 80s is sometimes iffy, but the science holds up pretty well.
Honestly? Even better. Robot Trouble is just as if not more compelling than Operation Sherlock. You of course have your romance angles with Roger and Wendy and Hap and Rachel but aside from the latter and even then they aren't pushed that far. It's not remotely central to the story that the sexual tension is there. But the plot now with a new spy taking away from the belief of Black Glove. It's good.
Heck knowing what I know of the series end there's even a fairly obvious clue to the reader who Black Glove is.
Major plot hole - when Ramon Korbuscek is "caught" the first time where the person actually caught was framed, the identity was never confirmed by Dr. Remov Another one, towards the end author describes the Missile Silo as having light then sometimes its very dark or something - it gets pretty confusing. Well 3 stars because the 'gang' builds and launches a Rocket, and the general parts of the story like capturing the robot were done well. This one didn't have much to do with AI though thats fine because its honestly the weakest part of the story so far.
Another entry in the young adult series The AI Gang. I actually liked this one better than the first in the trilogy. It suffers from some of the same issues in writing style but kept me pretty interested. And once again the tech doesn’t age as poorly as it probably should. Fun, short read! I’m excited to read the finale!
Not quite as good as the first, but still with that Coville flair. There's a little bit of crushing going on, but no full blown romance. WHICH I GREATLY APPRECIATED. I love the ensemble nature of this book, as well as the imperfection of the characters. I think I've figured out who the bad guy is. I hope I'm right because it was my suspect from book one. The plot, it thickens, with additional intrigue, increasing threat, and parental interference. Definitely going to read the next book. Recommend.
I didn't like this one as well as the first in the trilogy, maybe because I had it on Kindle and I couldn't keep track of who was who, or maybe because I read the first one a few months ago.