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The Stone Cold Age

The Stone Cold Age

#2 in series

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
From the author of the New York Times bestselling Jedi Academy books comes book two in the laugh-out-loud graphic novel series about Neanderthal siblings Lucy and Andy. Fans of Big Nate, Diary of a Wimpy Kid, and The Terrible Two won’t want to miss it!
 
“Lucy & Andy are Stone Age rock stars! I loved this book!” —Lincoln Peirce, author of the Big Nate series
 
Neanderthal siblings Lucy and Andy are back to their paleo pranks. This time, they have to put up with more than just each other—the cave is feeling awfully cramped since the humans moved in. They’re in the Ice Age, and legroom comes at a real premium!
 
Jeffrey Brown skillfully blends humor and history with paleontologist sections: Timeline of Key Discoveries, Ice Age Fact vs. Fiction, Silly Cavemen Myths, and more.
 
"A fast, funny read" –Kirkus Reviews
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 23, 2016
      Brown’s (the Jedi Academy series) episodic graphic novel about a clan of Neanderthals starts out low-key enough, as goofy Andy, his much smarter sister Lucy, and other children bicker over tool-making and food-gathering. (After debating mammoth-hunting options, they settle on “the usual,” i.e. “Chase one down and stab it until it stops moving.”) Two archaeologists pop up at the end of each chapter to demonstrate how the objects that Lucy and Andy use and make—their tools, the bones they chew on, even their teeth—reveal information about their lives. The female Neanderthal bones show just as much wear and tear as the males, the scientists point out; they may have done the same kinds of work. Hints sprinkled throughout about a lost spear and missing mammoth meat build to a climax as Andy and Lucy’s group encounters a smoother, more sophisticated, and possibly menacing group of humans. Readers with an interest in fossil discoveries won’t be able to put this down, while those who have never given cave life a thought may find themselves with a new interest. Ages 8–12. Agent: Marc Gerald, Agency Group.

    • Kirkus

      May 1, 2017
      Neanderthal siblings return for a blustery infoventure in the Ice Age.Lucy and Andy meet and welcome into their cave an extended, racially diverse family of humans. Andy is less than enthusiastic about the arrangement, but Lucy is glad to have Sasha, a little black girl, and the others to pal around with. Between hunts for food, the adults search for a nearby cave for the humans to move into. The kids play in the snow, do chores, visit a glacier, and visit the Neanderthal family's summer cave at the beach. Can the families outsmart cave bear Big Bob and appropriate his cave for the humans, or will they live together forever? Modern-day fictional commentators Pam (a white woman) and Eric (a black man) return as well to explain (usually with jokes) and expand on the actual science and discoveries behind the events in Lucy and Andy's comic-strip adventures. Science-y tidbits dot the narrative panels (usually followed by sarcastic one-liners), and the whole is followed by a museum list, a Q-and-A, and myth-busters about cavemen, all conveyed in a light tone. No further reading or works cited make this problematic as an informational source, but for the paleontologically inclined, it's a fast, funny read with likable kid characters. Captivated kids will be happy to see that Book 3 is on its way. (Graphic historical fiction. 9-12)

      COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      July 1, 2017
      Grades 3-6 In the continuing adventures of Neanderthal siblings Lucy and Andy, their family is joined by a group of early humans, and as the cold weather sets in, the two groups struggle to comfortably live together in a too-small cave. While Lucy easily makes friends with the new kids, Andy's feeling chaffed by the close quarters, and he's eager to help the humans find a new cave to live in, though his reasons are far from altruistic. In between Brown's spot-on depiction of kid jealousies, braggadocio, and bravery among the kids from both groups, a pair of paleontologists appears to offer scientific background on what life might have been like 40,000 years ago and how scientists have made those discoveries. The fictional narrative provides a nice framework for the background context, and the tone of the paleontologists' lesson is lighthearted and sometimes silly. Brown's cartoonish figures, rendered in pleasantly jittery lines, are full of character, and his comedic timing shines in his panel layouts. For fans of the series opener or kids who like learning about prehistoric eras.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2017, American Library Association.)

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Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:3.1
  • Lexile® Measure:460
  • Interest Level:4-8(MG)
  • Text Difficulty:0-2

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