Bad guys tremble at the sound of his name!
From: grateful@fred.com
To: melvin@beederman.com
Dear Melvin,
We need your help. Someone has been sending us threatening letters. We don't know who it is. Please come to our concert tonight, just in case.
Sincerely,
Fred of The Grateful Fred
Someone is out to get the Grateful Fred, Melvin Beederman's all-time favorite rock-and-roll band. Can he and his partner-in-uncrime, Candace, find out who it is before it's too late? Or will Joe the Okay Guy turn into Joe the Bad Guy and put an end to the Grateful Fred once and for all?
In this third installment of the Melvin Beederman series, only the narrator knows for sure!
From the Publisher
“A fun, flighty caper. Slyly sprinkled with borrowings from superhero tales and packed with kid-pleasing yucks, this copiously and comically illustrated tale is sufficiently full of baloney to fly.” Publishers Weekly
“Trine's fast-paced, humorous new series will capture the hearts of bright new readers.” Jody Fickes Shapiro, Adventures for Kids, Ventura, CA (from summer 2006 Booksense Children's Picks)
“Trine and Montijo have given readers an appealing superhero and his trusty assistant. These delightfully entertaining adventure stories are a must-have for most libraries.” School Library Journal
School Library Journal
Gr 2-4-In this third series installment, child superhero Melvin and his assistant Candace are trying to figure out who has it in for the hot new band, The Grateful Fred. When someone sets off a bomb at a concert, it's up to the two kids to find the culprit, a task somewhat hampered by Melvin's difficulty with flying and Candace's refusal to save the world before her math homework is done. Readers learn early on what the bad guy is up to, and the story line follows the hero's and villain's parallel stories until they finally meet. Rather than relying on mystery or action, the book attempts to capture its readers with wit-sometimes more successfully than others. It is funny that Melvin can't turn off his X-ray vision and has to look at everyone's underwear, but overuse of stock phrases such as "faster than a speeding bullet" and "nick of time" wear thin. Sketchy black-and-white cartoons appear frequently throughout. Early chapter-book readers would do better to stick with Bruce Hale's "Chet Gecko" (Harcourt) or Dav Pilkey's "Captain Underpants" (Scholastic) series.-Adrienne Furness, Webster Public Library, NY Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.