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Jimmy Coates: Revenge

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BfK No. 165 - July 2007

Cover Story
This issue’s cover illustration by David Roberts is from Julia Donaldson’s Tyrannosaurus Drip (see also Windows into Illustration). Thanks to Macmillan Children’s Books for their help with this July cover.

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Jimmy Coates: Revenge

Joe Craig
(HarperCollinsChildren'sBooks)
320pp, 978-0007232857, RRP £6.99, Paperback
10-14 Middle/Secondary
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Will Jimmy Coates ever escape the influence of NJ7? Is it credible that the British Secret Services should have such a department? If they are truly ‘inside his head’, why can’t they find him? Nevertheless, he and his friends escape to New York; he has a headache and tries to solve the mystery before we reach page 314. An additional six pages threaten a forthcoming sequel and invite readers to enter Jimmy Coates’ website and ‘download cool wallpaper’.

Jimmy Coates is a boy with a difference. He is only 38% human. It is extremely tempting to suggest that the author has a prose style that admirably matches this character defect. The sound of a dozen bullets is a ‘thud’, his headache is where his ‘ear meets his skull’ and a fall from the claw of a crane high above a city into a skip is like ‘landing on cushions’.

Yes, this is a kind of knowingly comic science fiction combining elements of James Bond, Spiderman and the Terminator, laced with some gratuitous violence and enough conspiracy theories to keep a tabloid newspaper in business for weeks. More seriously, it is marketed as the sort of book to wow reluctant boy readers away from computer games and into the pages of a book. Indeed, another reviewer has praised the author as having a ‘sharp satirical edge that keeps the new generation of boys hooked on books’. I’d concur, only replacing ‘satirical’ with ‘cynical’.

Reviewer: 
David Self
3
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