D’une époque avant le temps vient un héros des temps modernes… Avec le cerveau d’un espion et le corps d’un dinosaure, il est le plus grand agent secret de l’histoire… Ou de la préhistoire!
Son nom : Espionosaure Préparez-vous : Action! Danger! Insultes! Explosions! Bonhommes de neige ninja! Dinosaures en robes!
Guy is an award-winning author whose children's books series include Stitch Head, Skeleton Keys, Dinkin Dings, Spynosaur, The Legend of Frog and Atomic! In 2010 Dinkin Dings and the Frightening Things won the Blue Peter Award for Most Fun Book with Pictures.
Guy's has also written plays for both adults and children. He has previously been a theatre producer, illustrator, temp, gerbil whisperer and has acted his way out of several paper bags.
Guy spent his childhood reading comics and hoping one day to become a superhero. He spends his adulthood in more or less the same way.
Guy lives in London with his wife and no dog - yet.
I received this copy from the publisher via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review This book is full of super-hero silliness and zippy rap songs that should appeal to kids, and puns and references that will appeal all the young-at-heart. Half the fun for older readers is trying to spot the references in the character names and plot lines. There are nods to James Bond, Dashiel Hammett, action films with bomb countdowns, and convoluted logical (??!) deduction sequences that make Agatha Christie books look impressive, as well as “Karate Kid” style martial arts moves and a homage to the late, great Freddie Mercury. The main story is written in prose with illustrations, but there are also graphic novel sections – especially for the flashback sequences (you have to have those) and raps – and “Department 6 Classifile” information inserts reminiscent of “Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy”. I loved the description of M11, a woman spy with “a no-nonsense approach and a fondness for scatter cushions”. Danger Monkey is one of the most irritating co-spies around, but Amber (“Don’t call me poppet”) as the hero’s daughter and ninja-trained side-kick is wonderful. There is, of course, an Arch-nemesis – P.O.I.S.O.N (Persons of Infamy, Spite and Occasional Notoriousness), with sub-nemesis, Ergo Ego The McGuffin secret weapon is an actual McGuffin (I had to google it to be sure) and there is a wonderful twist near the end as the secret weapon is revealed.