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Alien Next Door #6

The Mystery Valentine

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Even aliens fall in love! Zeke has a crush and Harris offers to help him navigate Earth customs and discover the identity of his secret Valentine! Read Book 6 in the bestselling Alien Next Door series.

Valentine's Day is right around the corner, and Harris explains the holiday and its traditions to Zeke. When Zeke gets an anonymous valentine, Harris is excited to help him figure out who sent it, but Zeke is confused at the customs of Earth, and his efforts to get a girl to notice him by doing what Harris tells him to don't go quite right. Will Zeke be able to turn things around and show his valentine his feelings?

112 pages, Paperback

Published December 18, 2018

19 people are currently reading
82 people want to read

About the author

A.I. Newton

25 books16 followers

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5 stars
76 (49%)
4 stars
43 (28%)
3 stars
25 (16%)
2 stars
6 (3%)
1 star
3 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for Chloe (Always Booked).
3,180 reviews122 followers
March 13, 2023
3.5 stars as with the rest of the series! This one is around valentines day. Zeke gets valentines from Roxie, Harris and a mystery person. He tries to figure it out and gives gifts to the people he suspects it to be and in the end he finds out who it was (as well as learns about an Earthly holiday.
Profile Image for Robin.
877 reviews8 followers
March 16, 2022
The Alien Next Door is actually not one book, but (to date) eight books that I picked up as a boxed set at Costco last weekend. (The set also included a children's activity book, with pictures to color, writing prompts, etc.) Their titles are The New Kid; Aliens for Dinner?!; Alien Scout; Trick or Cheat?; Baseball Blues; The Mystery Valentine; Up, Up, and Away; and A New Planet.

While each book stands somewhat on its own on the scale of an elementary-level chapter book, the whole series also works together as a continuous story with each individual book as a kind of chapter in it. My father, who got to it before me, read all eight books in one sitting, and was the first to complain that the last one ends abruptly without really resolving the storyline. Actually, his exact words were, "It just goes pbpbpbpbt." I myself managed it in two settings, but they went quickly in terms of total time. I'm glad to report that according to Fantastic Fiction, a ninth book titled The Marvelous Museum is supposed to come out in October 2022. So, I guess this series isn't over yet.

As for the eight books so far, most of them came out in quick succession in 2018 and 2019 and have charming illustrations, featuring an apparently American (or maybe Canadian?) boy named Harris who begins to suspect that the awkward, lonely new kid next door may actually be an alien from outer space. The more sure of this he becomes, the more his family and his best friend, Roxy, think he's just being mean because Zeke is different. But Harris is right; and after the first couple of books, he and Zeke become friends and Harris begins to share in his secret. Harris and Roxy help Zeke learn about such strange human customs as scouting campouts, trick-or-treating, baseball and Valentines.

Then Zeke finds out his parents, Xad and Quar, have finished their research on Earth and they have to move back to the planet Tragas. At first, Harris and Zeke look for a way to delay their departure. In the last book (so far), Harris reveals Zeke's secret to Roxy, and the two of them stow away on the ship and get to experience the "new kid" phenomenon from the other side, disguised as aliens on a strange new world.

Written at an elementary level, the books are simple and light but they also carry themes, such as being kind to people who are different from you, not cheating or taking shortcuts. They look at American(?) cultural customs in a humorous light, with charm, goofy humor and an occasional flash of wit. The weirdness of Tragas and its cultural customs comes in for some imaginative treatment, too, modeling Harris and Roxy's openness to having new experiences and, of course, their loyal friendship with Zeke. I feel even better recommending these books knowing that there's more to come.

A.I. Newton is also the author of the "Little Olympians" series, also illustrated by Sarkar, in which kid-sized Greek gods go to camp to learn how to use their powers and get along together. Their titles, up to the most recent release, are Zeus, God of Thunder; Athena, Goddess of Wisdom; Hermes, the Fastest God; and Artemis, the Archer Goddess. I can't actually find any information online about A.I. Newton as a human being. For all I know, he may be a fictitious pen-name, maybe with a whole list of author credits under another name.

About illustrator Anjan Sarkar, I've learned that he's a British illustrator of Indian heritage who has contributed art to such books as Rum Pum Pum by David L. Harrison and Jane Yolen, Queen of the Hanukkah Dosas by Pamela Ehrenberg, and Level Up! Last One Standing by Tom Nicoll, among 20-some books.
Profile Image for Andrew J.
113 reviews2 followers
February 15, 2023
Well, somehow, I did it again and managed to finish a book right at 11:59 PM. As I glanced at my phone after reading the last page, the time changed to 12:00 AM, so that counts as finishing it before midnight.
Zekelebraxis (Zeke for short), not being an Earthling, has never heard of Valentine's Day and naturally doesn't understand it until Harris explains it to him. Then he receives 3 Valentines: 1 from Harris, 1 from Roxy, and 1 from a mystery person. Diving headfirst into heteronormativity, it is immediately declared that somehow an alien from Tragas is "straight" because he's male in human form and therefore MUST like female humans, and therefore the mystery Valentine MUST have come from a girl. Never mind that this would be akin to beastiality or zoophilia. I shall never understand the alleged necessity for heteronormativity and heterosexualization. I'm always bewildered by it.
2 stars.
4 reviews
May 25, 2022
this book is about an alien kid who is trying to figure out who gave him a valentine card with no name on it. i think that other people will like this book, but this book was boring to me because i do not like stuff that about love. i don't feel like i learned anything from this book. it was not interesting to me and i probably won't read it again. i enjoyed this author's other book.
17 reviews
May 15, 2020
I think this book is fun because I like mystery books and it had a mystery. Also I like building stuff and Zeke built cool stuff in it. Compared to the other books in the series, I like this one the most because Zeke still doesn't understand Earth and there's a funny part in this book about that.
Profile Image for Heather J..
168 reviews
February 27, 2023
Another book harry and I enjoyed reading before school in the parking lot.
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews

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