Tuesday, November 23, 2010

"Akiko on the Planet Smoo" by Mark Crilley

Okay, everyone, listen up!  Time for a little “Stranger Danger” review.  Suppose you are ten years old and receive a cryptic, silvery metallic letter that does not bear a return address and is emblazoned with the warning that it is to be read by you alone “and no one else.”  Would you show the envelope to your loving and attentive mother hovering outside your door?  Lets say you push on and open this mysterious envelope as your best friend looks on giving you advice (yes, you ignore that pesky “for your eyes only” command).  Imagine that it contains a note saying, “We are coming to get you.  Meet us outside your bedroom window tonight at 8:00.  Don’t forget your toothbrush.”  Lets recap, stranger-danger pupils: “We are coming to GET YOU”  (emphasis added by a concerned mother). Perhaps it would be wise not to listen to your best friend tell you that it’s probably a joke and heed your years of instruction and hand that note over to a supervising adult.  NOW.  Finally, assume that you shrug off your extensive stranger danger training and wait until 8:00 to make your decision.  At the appointed time, you discover that two aliens have arrived in a spaceship to take you to the planet Smoo.  Would you balk when they produce a robot in your exact likeness to replace you for the two weeks you’ll be gone?  Well, as a mother, I am happy that you are bringing your toothbrush but am not too keen that you are ready to hop in that spaceship and take off!   In a stranger danger scenario, you would be evaluated (kindly) as “Needs Improvement.”  But as an adventurer and children's fantasy book  heroine, you would be deemed intrepid and engaging.  Just like Akiko!
Akiko is the heroine of ten fantasy adventure books by Mark Crilley.  Akiko on the Planet Smoo launches this popular series, based on Crilley’s comic book series of same name.  The books are humorous, highly readable texts that chronicle Akiko’s adventures as she leads a cohort of misfit alien characters on missions for King Froptoppit.  In this first book, Akiko and her companions embark on a mission to rescue Prince Froptoppit from the evil and crazy Alia Rellapor, the sworn enemy of the King.  On Earth, Akiko was reluctant to become captain of the fourth-grade safety patrol but when called upon for this mission on Planet Smoo, she girds herself and agrees to serve as leader. 

Crilley employs a light conversational tone and displays a flair for dialogue in this humorous and lighthearted book.  This alien world is bright and positive and poses few frights or sad moments.   His short chapters are manageable and serve to drive the action at a strong pace.  In addition, Crilley remains true to his cartoonist roots and offers charming illustrations that support his plot.  For example, he describes Poog, one of Akiko’s stalwart companions, as “really little more than a floating head.  He had two eyes, one mouth, and no nose.  He was almost perfectly round and covered by pale purple-white skin that shimmered like smooth leather.”  Fortunately, Crilley juxtaposes this passage with a detailed drawing of Akiko’s introduction to Poog, thus scaffolding our understanding of the appearance of this key character.

The Akiko series is appropriate for third grade readers and above.  On www.markcrilley.com, the author introduces the Billy Clikk series and “Miki Falls” manga books, his other fantasy books geared for older readers. My son enjoyed the Akiko books from third to sixth grade.  I remember him laughing out loud at Akiko’s encounters with alien life and eagerly sharing funny stories from the first five books in the series.  I had never read the books myself.   I appreciate the humor and the appeal to young readers and certainly would recommend their inclusion in a classroom library.  The Akiko books might prove highly appealing for independent reading, especially for students who gravitate to fantasy, science fiction, adventure, or a text with a comic sensibility.

3 comments:

  1. Akiko is definitely not your typical comic book character and I like that. It's also pretty impressive that your son was captivated by a series with a female protagonist (which means she must be awesome and not "too girly"). Do you know if the entire series is available in english? It sounds like this might have been a find from overseas.

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  2. Definitely available in English. He is an American writer who has lived and married in Japan but is now stateside. I never even thought about the female protagonist angle and Jonathan reading it but now I am intrigued. She is a terrific heroine and Crilley portrays her in believable fourth grade attitudes and words. Jonathan saw me reading the books this week and commented on how much he enjoyed them. I will ask him if Akiko's gender ever occurred to him.

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  3. So far, we've done very well at finding female heroes in the fantasy/science fiction genre! Great job group!
    This seems like a great adventure tale for students. I can see myself using this book or ones like it to encourage students to imagine their own new worlds with new creatures with themselves as heroes. Great review, Christine!

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