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ORIENTATION NOTEBOOK

From the Poppy Playtime series

Fun for fans ready for a heightened in-world reading experience.

A worldbuilding inside view of the video game Poppy Playtime.

This volume offers backstory, enriching the context of play established in the game world by presenting a behind-the-scenes employee experience complete with articles, research notes, and scribbled messages, which add a sense of discovery. The immersive risks and secrets that readers find are subtle, offering little beyond surface scares, but the visual impressions will engage and delight fans of the universe. With a message from the founder of Playtime Co., a short company history, corporate staff overview, employee guidelines, safety reminders and warnings, product overviews, production line notes, a public tour guide, and more, the notebook hints at the experiments, dangers, and lingering mysteries players encounter in the game. The lively visual format conveys details, with site locations described in ways that will be familiar for gamers eager to entrench themselves more fully in the world. The strong found-footage vibes are enhanced by the bloodstains and embedded notes from past employees, and readers will likely overlook the slightly repetitive elements questioning the company’s motives. The book closes with an employee calendar (with notes such as, “Surgery. Remember to bring change of clothes after what happened last time”) and an employee quiz. The short segments, quick pace, and visual format will appeal to reluctant readers.

Fun for fans ready for a heightened in-world reading experience. (Horror. 13-18)

Pub Date: May 7, 2024

ISBN: 9781339014951

Page Count: 144

Publisher: AFK/Scholastic

Review Posted Online: March 9, 2024

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 1, 2024

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STALKING JACK THE RIPPER

Perhaps a more genuinely enlightened protagonist would have made this debut more engaging

Audrey Rose Wadsworth, 17, would rather perform autopsies in her uncle’s dark laboratory than find a suitable husband, as is the socially acceptable rite of passage for a young, white British lady in the late 1800s.

The story immediately brings Audrey into a fractious pairing with her uncle’s young assistant, Thomas Cresswell. The two engage in predictable rounds of “I’m smarter than you are” banter, while Audrey’s older brother, Nathaniel, taunts her for being a girl out of her place. Horrific murders of prostitutes whose identities point to associations with the Wadsworth estate prompt Audrey to start her own investigation, with Thomas as her sidekick. Audrey’s narration is both ponderous and polemical, as she sees her pursuit of her goals and this investigation as part of a crusade for women. She declares that the slain aren’t merely prostitutes but “daughters and wives and mothers,” but she’s also made it a point to deny any alignment with the profiled victims: “I am not going as a prostitute. I am simply blending in.” Audrey also expresses a narrow view of her desired gender role, asserting that “I was determined to be both pretty and fierce,” as if to say that physical beauty and liking “girly” things are integral to feminism. The graphic descriptions of mutilated women don’t do much to speed the pace.

Perhaps a more genuinely enlightened protagonist would have made this debut more engaging . (Historical thriller. 15-18)

Pub Date: Sept. 20, 2016

ISBN: 978-0-316-27349-7

Page Count: 336

Publisher: Jimmy Patterson/Little, Brown

Review Posted Online: May 31, 2016

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 2016

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THE CHANGING MAN

A descriptive and atmospheric paranormal social thriller that could be a bit tighter.

After a Nigerian British girl goes off to an exclusive boarding school that seems to prey on less-privileged students, she discovers there might be some truth behind an urban legend.

Ife Adebola joins the Urban Achievers scholarship program at pricey, high-pressure Nithercott School, arriving shortly after a student called Leon mysteriously disappeared. Gossip says he’s a victim of the glowing-eyed Changing Man who targets the lonely, leaving them changed. Ife doesn’t believe in the myth, but amid the stresses of Nithercott’s competitive, privileged, majority-white environment, where she is constantly reminded of her state school background, she does miss her friends and family. When Malika, a fellow Black scholarship student, disappears and then returns, acting strangely devoid of personality, Ife worries the Changing Man is real—and that she’s next. Ife joins forces with classmate Bijal and Benny, Leon’s younger brother, to uncover the truth about who the Changing Man is and what he wants. Culminating in a detailed, gory, and extended climactic battle, this verbose thriller tempts readers with a nefarious mystery involving racial and class-based violence but never quite lives up to its potential and peters out thematically by its explosive finale. However, this debut offers highly visually evocative and eerie descriptions of characters and events and will appeal to fans of creature horror, social commentary, and dark academia.

A descriptive and atmospheric paranormal social thriller that could be a bit tighter. (Thriller. 14-18)

Pub Date: Sept. 26, 2023

ISBN: 9781250868138

Page Count: 384

Publisher: Feiwel & Friends

Review Posted Online: June 8, 2023

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 1, 2023

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