In two parallel stories, a fourteen-year-old boy who is NASA's first Junior Astronaut and a fourteen-year-old Maasai herder in Kenya both edge into maturity while questioning their family traditions
I thought that the book Countdown by Ben Mikaelsen was a good book. It tells the story of a young boy named Elliot who is chosen to be the first junior astronaut in space. Meanwhile Vincent, a young Maasai boy from Africa, is figuring out how the world works. While Elliot is in space his job is to talk on a radio. He gets in contact with Vincent everytime the space shuttle is passing over Africa. The boys talk about what way of life is correct and argue because they are so different. When Vincent lands in the space shuttle the boys meet each other and talk about how they would like to learn each others way of life.
Elliot is a normal boy from the United States. He can’t believe he was the first junior astronaut chosen to fly in space. He goes to Houston, Texas for nine months to train for his flight. Vincent lives in a Massai tribe in Africa. He is made fun of for not being able to kill a lion. He proves to his father there is more to life than just the Massia's way of life.
This story takes place in modern day. The setting switches back and forth from the space shuttle and the tribe where Vincent is living. The setting is very important because the whole purpose of the book is to show that people can still get along with each other even if they have very different ways of life.
The theme of this book is that people can still live peacefully and get along no matter where they are from. Elliot and Vincent grew up in very different families and on opposite sides of the world. They would argue at first but eventually got to know one another and got along with each other.
I would recommend this book to young adults of either gender as it tells a good story.
I would give this book a 4 out of 5 star rating.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
When Ellie Schroeder finds out that he will become the first junior astronaut, his whole vision of the world changes when he contacts Messai boy in Africa. They learn how theircoijtries blame each other, and what they can do to set an example for peace. I wish that the book could be a little less maturespunding, and more kid like. That's what the book is set on, right? That's why i give this book three stars.
Oh hey they became friends what a surprise! and Vincent wasn't the only one that Elliot could talk to, and he wasn't even alone in the space shuttle. I hate this book and if you had to read this for school I feel your pain.
The way that the book opened with the author surrogate ranting about drugs, gangs and teen pregnancies was already a red flag; sounding the alarm that the author was a bitter old white man shaking his fist at 'Kids Today' as he longed 'Make America Great Again' a full two decades before Trump first fell backwards into power. But the second I heard the author describe the young Maasai character as being fascinated with the 'Magic' of electricity and the black box which allows people to speak to others all over the world, I immediately ditched this patronising, chauvinistic and 'White Man's Burden' pile of garbage where it belonged. Because the thing that makes it so much worse than any explicitly racist garbage is that the author of this drivel and the schoolboards who forced children to read it genuinely believe that it's enlightened and progressive!
...Seriously, if this book had been written in the 1960's, then that 'Might' have been the case by comparison. But the fact that it was written in the 90's makes me realise just how racist we all remain to this day! Dx
I think this was a 3.5 star book. I did not appreciate the use of the word "ghetto" (twice, I believe), to describe...who? Black people? Disadvantaged or poor people? The term was outdated when the book was written, not sure how it made it to print.
The details about going to space were extensive, but I feel some folks might be interested in that. I thought it was o.k. I would have preferred the NASA space training talk trimmed and the story between Elliot and Vincent expanded, perhaps post-landing.
The part we were all waiting for, when Spaceboy Elliot and Vincent speak over the radio, were too few and far between, but their interactions are the best part.
I love their discussion of what god looks like. Even if you're going to pass on reading the book--just read that part (in Chapter 21)!!!
This book was alright. I read it in middle school (the pace we read it was a little hard to keep up with). It was certainly interesting to learn about astronaut-training and Maasai-culture, and it was intriguing when Elliot and Vincent finally make radio-contact, but the story felt somewhat slow overall.
A relaxing read that has just a bit of action and suspense. I thought it was clever to make the two protagonists both from cultures where cattle-raising is very important. I think the coming-of-age aspect was implemented more effectively with Vincent the Maasai teenager than with Elliot the American teen.
This book is about two 14-year old boys, one in Africa and one in Montana who becomes an astronaut. I enjoyed learning about the Maasai culture, but wasn't that interested in a day-by-day account of what astronauts go through in their training. It was just okay.
Was talking about some of the awful books they made us read for school. This is the worst book ever written. I’d rather read anything else. Fuck this book and fuck whoever did curriculum for the BSD circa 2012.
idk why ppl are saying this is racist but 4.25 idk its just super good im kinda disappointed bc of the ending tho ngl cuz i thought it would have more like of them talking so yes anyway it was super good totally recommend
The world is a very cool place. With people from just about every region, having every culture, and living every way possible. You only realize how big our planet really is after you see something life changing. Our world is a small planet. And this book taught me that and not much else.
The Plot: Elliot, an average 14 year old, has been selected to be the first teenager in space. While on the other side of the planet, Vincent, a soon to be Maasai warrior, is faced with the troubles of change. Soon, very soon, these boys lives shall intertwine with each other in the weirdest way possible.
The Characters: Pretty good actually. Elliot and Vincent have realistic reactions to the changes in their life and the people they love.
The Story: Good in theory, messy in practice. I love this idea for a story, he just didn't hit what I wanted him to hit. This book, again, falls flat because it would have been better, had it been longer. (Seems to be a reoccurring theme with 2 stared books)
Hello World: Bitter wind from Crazy Peak tugged at the sagebrush as fourteen-year-old Elliot Schroeder coaxed his big buckskin horse back towards the ranch.
RRAR: Rated 10+ for Blood
The Verdict:
Epic Awesome Meh X Bad Terrible
This book did everything right except tell a story I felt was good. I love the characters, I love the idea even more, but the way the author presented it just wasn't good enough. I felt myself dreading Vincent's POV more than Elliot's until the end, just because the story was going nowhere. The ending, while like Giver's, I felt deserved an actual ending instead of a reader created one. And as always, I will see you in cyberspace.
Elliott goes up in orbit on the Space Shuttle as part of a special "junior astronaut" program, and while orbiting he radios down to various ham radio operators. He talks frequently with Vincent, a Maasai boy in Kenya, who is struggling to reconcile the traditional warrior ways he is learning with his desire to know more about the West and to become a doctor. Both boys are a little at odds with their fathers--Elliott's dad is a rancher out West--but through their nightly conversations they come a little closer to understanding another's way of life. Their discussions are also quite humorous, and were what I liked best about the story.
The story of two boys raised on opposite sides of the Earth: one the first teenage American astronaut, the other a young Maasai cow herder.
This was an interesting subject, but I felt beaten about the head with the author's opinions on caring for the environment and world brotherhood. That is not to say I didn't agree with much of what he said, I just felt that the preaching he did was unnecessary even for a youthful audience.
Two boys are facing difficulty because they want to choose different paths for their lives than what their father's want and expect of them. One boy is from Montana and the other Kenya, a Maasai. They contact one another via radio and due to cultural differences they clash but eventually form a strong friendship.
I like this author a lot for children's novels. His writing is captivating and he tackles important issues. This wasn't one of my favorites from him. My son might like it when he gets older if he still aspires to become an astronaut when he grows up.
This is an excellent read for middle schooler's and I highly recommend it. What a great book in showing how completely different kids (culturally) can reach out and get past the differences. Because really, when it comes down to it, they are just two kids growing up. Really enjoyed this book!
In this book the author tried to show different cultures with an interesting story, but he failed to do both. He was only able to show the Maasai culture and make one of the worst stories I have ever read. I wouldn't have read it if if wasn't required for school.
I read this book to help Jason with his summer reading packet for 7th grade. It's a good story, though I don't think Jason allowed himself to enjoy it, because it was for a school assignment!
we had 2 read it for literature in 6th grade (easy read 4 sixth graders!) and my friends and i all thought it was going 2 b stupid but we ended up liking it!
For me this was too full of information on both sides. The action seems incidental to their conversations, and there are multiple little lessons rather than any driving theme.