Chitty
Chitty Bang Bang Flies Again, by Frank Cottrel Boyce, illustrated by Joe
Berger (Candlewick, 2012, upper elementary/middle grade, 192 pages)
The
Tootings (mother, father, Lucy, Jem, and the baby, little Harry) were a normal
English family, with a normal English car. This all changed when Mr. Tooting
lost his job...and the car that went with it. But when Mrs. Tooting brings home
a derelict camper van, the Tooting family embarks on an adventure more fantastic
than they could have dreamt.
Dad and Jem get the camper van running
again, and supply Lucy with the black paint she needs to make her corner of it
feel homey. And they set off to see the world. But first, they stop at a local
salvage yard with an extraordinary past, and find a new engine for the van--one
of incredible power, though it has to be started with a hand crank. When it gets
going, it becomes clear that this new incarnation of the van has a mind of its
own...and it can fly. Not only that, but it is a van on a mission!
Soon
the Tooting family is zooming off to Paris, spending some quality time on the
tip of the Eiffel tower,where the old engine is reunited with its original
headlights. Next stop, Egypt...where the original wheels ended up. But Chitty
Chitty Bang Bang, as the van is now called, has attracted the attention of
unscrupulous, fabulously wealthy bad guys! There is Danger! Brushes with Death!
and finally, a daring escape....
It's lots of fun, made more so by the
cheerful illustrations of Joe Berger (I especially liked the drawing of how
everything fit into the camper van! The bad guys are over the top, but heck, if
you can enjoy and accept a flying car searching for its missing pieces, what are
a few implausible bad guys. The Tooting family are all nicely distinct
people--fun and quirky and occasionally difficult.
In short, it's a fun,
fast book that's both a lovely homage to the first book (which is more enjoyable
than the movie!) and a fine read in its own right.
Note 1: it turns out
that Chitty can do more than fly--we learn at the end of the book that she also
has a Chronojuster, and it still works. So I almost counted this as a time
travel book...but that really seems to be another story, which I hope is
forthcoming.
Note 2: it's not mentioned in the text, and has no bearing
on the Story, but the Tooting family happens to be multiracial--Mrs. Tooting is
shown in the illustrations with dark skin, Mr. Tooting with white, and the kids
fall in between. Yay! Another book for my multicultural sci fi/fantasy list.
By Way of Introduction
This blog gathers together my reviews of speculative fiction books for kids and teens in which the central protagonists are multicultural. The reviews were originally published at my main blog, Charlotte's Library. I'm adding labels (a rather fraught process), so that people can find specific diversities...doubtless I"ll be tweeking them as I go.
This blog is a work in progress--I have well over 100 more reviews already written to add to it, and I hope I'll add many more new books, interviews, and other content about diverse books!
(also to come are links to other websites and blogs....)
This blog is a work in progress--I have well over 100 more reviews already written to add to it, and I hope I'll add many more new books, interviews, and other content about diverse books!
(also to come are links to other websites and blogs....)
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