Into the Labyrinth - Roderick Townley
OK, but not as good as The Great Good Thing.
(Flash is loading. If this text does not disappear you need to install the latest flash version)
- Author:Roderick Townley
- # of pages: 256
- Publisher:Penguin Putnam Inc.
- Original Publication Date: 04/12/2004
- Genre: Fiction - Fantasy
- Hardcover: $16.95
- Publisher's Recommended Reading Level: 10 up
- Read Aloud: 8+
- Read Alone: 9+
Parents need to know
Families can talk about nature and the interaction of stories, readers, authors, and characters. Do you think different readers view the same book the same way? What characters have you grown especially fond of? Why? Are they characters that seem like you or people you could relate to?
Message
Social Behavior:
Consumerism:
Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco:
Violence
Sex
Language
One mild expletive.
Common Sense says
What's the story?
Reviewed by Amy Brotman
But being uploaded onto the Net not only brings more stress, it also brings a computer virus that is eating away at the Story. So Sylvie, along with Rosetta and the girl with the dark blue eyes, must venture into the corridors of the Net to find the source of the virus, and destroy it.
Is it any good?
Townley takes the intriguing premise of The Great Good Thing into cyberspace, with mixed results.
On the one hand, it's as fascinating as ever. Sylvie, a fictional character in a story that now includes some people from the real world, moves easily between book, dream, and now computer. She and her cohorts act out their story whenever a Reader looks in, but have lives of their own when no one is reading.
On the other hand, the logical holes in the concept have grown wider and more noticeable. Though there are thousands of books, there is only one set of characters who are looked in on by every Reader. What do they do when more than one person reads at the same time? The words seem to be physical objects over which they can trip, yet the story seems to be set in the illustrations. The interaction between words and scenery is frustratingly unclear. And some of the computer details, such as firewalls and cookies, seem to be backwards. The kind of bright, book-loving children who will have wanted to read this sequel may be annoyed by the inconsistencies even as they are enthralled by the idea. Nevertheless, for a discussion group even the inconsistencies provide fodder for thought and conversation.
From the Book:
Sylvie had an amazing life, and she got to live it dozens of times a day, now that the book she lived in was back in print.
Her life, in print again! For years, there had been one known copy of her story, and it sat on a shelf in the second-floor bedroom of an old house. But now, through what seemed a miracle, the book was republished, and Sylvie suddenly found herself in living rooms and waiting rooms, apartments, bus stations, and the windows of bookstores.
Other choices
Other Books by Roderick Townley
The Great Good Thing
More Metafiction
The Neverending Story by Michael Ende
Travel Far, Pay No Fare by Anne Lindbergh
The Bookstore Mouse by Peggy Christian
Summer Reading is Killing Me by Jon Scieszka
Bad Dreams by Ann Fine
Inkheart by Cornelia Funke
Parents and kids say
All Reviews
There are 1 reviews.
Adult Reviews
There are 1 reviews.
Kids Reviews
There are 0 reviews.
There are no kids reviews.

