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City of Ruins: Danger Boy Episode 4
 
 
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City of Ruins: Danger Boy Episode 4 [Hardcover]

Mark London Williams (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)


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Book Description

January 9, 2007 9 and up4 and upDanger Boy (Book 4)
Danger Boy is back! With the deadly slow pox spreading, the time-traveling trio hurtle back to Jerusalem circa 583 BCE.

After another close call, the good news is that Eli Sands, aka Danger Boy, is back in San Francisco in 2020. The bad news is that Eli and his friends, Clyne the evolved dinosaur and Thea the Alexandrian scholar, are being held captive by the government agency DARPA. Since their last foray into the Fifth Dimension, it seems history has been unraveling everywhere, and the deadly slow pox virus is spreading fast. DARPA's plan is for Eli to visit ancient Jerusalem. But Eli and crew discover that the city is in ruins from a Babylonian invasion, and soon an angry mob is ready to stone them. Will Danger Boy and his friends find their way home again?

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Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal

Grade 5–8—In this fourth story in the series, Eli, 13, called a "chronological asset" by the secret government agency that has hijacked him, must time travel from his present, the year 2020, back to Jerusalem in 583 B.C.E. to try to find a cure for the present-day plague called the slow pox, or Chronological Displacement Syndrome, that may or may not have been bioengineered as a weapon. His first-person narrative alternates with those of his companions, Clyne, an intelligent dinosaur from another planet, and Thea, 14, the daughter of Hypatia of ancient Alexandria. They communicate with each other and with the natives they meet with the help of a lingo-spot, an instantaneous translator. Major plot elements from the first three books are introduced for background, including time travel to Alexandria and San Francisco during World War II to meet people like King Arthur and Merlin, Lewis and Clark, Thomas Jefferson, and Nazis. Revisiting the themes of the previous volumes and setting up the major and minor characters with their own stories and time shifts create an environment of chronological multitasking. Readers accustomed to IMing while talking on the phone and doing homework will revel in this fractured time line, as well as in Eli's ruminations on relativity, unintended consequences of technology, and quantum flux.—Ann Robinson, Moultonborough Academy Library, NH
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

About the Author

Mark London Williams is the author of plays, comics, and the four Danger Boy books. He lives in Los Angeles, California.

Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 9 and up
  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Candlewick (January 9, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0763628719
  • ISBN-13: 978-0763628710
  • Product Dimensions: 5.4 x 1.2 x 7.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,861,126 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Hi--

I'm the author of the "Danger Boy" time travel series, now making its way back to Kindle and other eBook formats... I'm also a journalist, covering the warp and woof of showbiz and its discontents here in L.A. (where I find myself currently based, on the madcap, troubling/fascinating edge-of-the-Pacific).

I also teach wordslinging, write the occasional comic or play, and have some other work in the pipeline. Stay tuned. I also find myself raising a son or two, and trying to hike a trail or three when I can. I'm still trying to figure out what it is the coyotes and crows are attempting to tell me.

 

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Courtesy of Teens Read Too, May 4, 2007
This review is from: City of Ruins: Danger Boy Episode 4 (Hardcover)
It's the year 2020 and Eli Sands is being held captive by DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency), the people who pushed him into this whole Danger Boy, time-travel thing to begin with. They claim to be studying him to find out what it is about his bio-mechanical structure that gives him the ability to travel through time unharmed. But, that's about all they'll tell him, and it's the least of his concerns. Eli has many more important questions, like where are they keeping his friends?

Thea, a human girl from far in the past, and Cline, a highly evolved dragon-like creature from a completely different time and place, have become Eli's time-travel companions. Eli doesn't like being apart from the "family" they have created. Speaking of family, where is Eli's mother? He hasn't seen her since they all accidentally ended up in the 1960's. If DARPA can keep track of him, why can't they seem to locate his mom? And how about his dad? Isn't he supposed to be working for them? The only personal contact Eli has is with the DARPA agents, and he only knows them by number, not even their code names, much less their real names!

When the alarm goes off and Eli is deserted, he sees an opportunity that he can't pass up. He escapes his prison and wanders through the DARPA tunnels in search of his friends, and maybe some answers.

Finding his friends proves to be the easy part, and raises more questions than answers. Cline mysteriously appears in another set of rooms. Rooms that somehow duplicate the rooms that Eli lived in with his parents when they started their time-travel experiments. How did these things get here? Who would want to replicate Eli's home? Why? Thea is being interrogated elsewhere by the same DARPA agents that were testing Eli. But Thea seems to be not right somehow. Eli is sure she has the deadly slow pox that has been infecting the public and forcing quarantines all over the world. 30, a head DARPA agent, explains that the slow pox epidemic was created by DARPA to control people. The only people infected are the ones they infected on purpose, and Thea was not chosen for that. But then why is she sick?

It turns out that DARPA's effort to control everything is causing it all to fall apart. The harder they try to contain everything and everyone, the more everything spirals out of control. And now they need Eli's help. But why should he help the people who held him hostage, who kept him from his father, lost Cline to a traveling freak show, and created a disease that mutated and infected Thea and is now incurable? He shouldn't. But he will. Because he might be able to fix all of this, repair the damage that time-travel has created in history, find his mom, locate Cline, and, hopefully, save Thea.

In order to do any of that, he'll have to travel back to biblical times, to a Jerusalem destroyed by war and unwelcoming to strangers. A place far in the past where Eli finds a strange array of friends and enemies from the future.

This is Episode Four in the DANGER BOY series, and the first one that I read. (I know, not really the normal way to go about things.) Due to the fact that I missed the first three, I was a bit hesitant to read this. I admit I was a bit lost at times. I don't tell you all of this to discourage you. In fact, it's the exact opposite. Even not completely knowing what was going on I thought this was a great book! I love the characters; Cline especially is hilarious with his extreme intelligence and odd appreciation for pop culture. I really like the concept of the story, as well as this particular piece of it. Also, it's a really cool way to get a bird's eye view of history! If you've read the first three, I bet you'll like this one. If not, but you're a fan of time-travel, or history, or just good adventure, go check out the series. I know I plan to. I don't think either of us will be disappointed.

Reviewed by: Carrie Spellman
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A great read!, February 14, 2007
This review is from: City of Ruins: Danger Boy Episode 4 (Hardcover)
I really enjoyed this! I own every one of the books in this series (City of Ruins is #4 and I always look forward to each new installment) and I feel they're consistently exciting, creative and engaging; City of Ruins is no exception. The author speaks to young audiences in a distinct & accessible (for YA readers as well as appreciative adults) narrative voice, and this book (like all the others) is involving, well-plotted and a great way for older kids (and even adults such as me) to learn about history and significant moments IN history, as well as geography. Besides, what kid wouldn't want to be exactly like Eli Sands, the intrepid Time Traveler who gets to bounce around through time this way? He's a great character for kids to live vicariously through, and he gets a cool set of friends to join in his adventures as well. As a former teacher, I think older kids will be able to lose themselves completely in any of these stories and identify with the characters; my favorite is still Clyne, the dinosaur (who briefly spends time with a carnival). I loved him from his appearance in the first book--and I'm still waiting for a "stuffed Clyne" doll to emerge on the shelves someday (fingers crossed)!!! I hope the series is picked up and turned into a movie; it should be. A quick, easy & pleasurable read (as the author writes more, the books get thicker--and the stories get better). For YA fantasy/fiction, I highly recommend taking a peek.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Quick-time action--a computer game you can read!, June 7, 2008
This review is from: City of Ruins: Danger Boy Episode 4 (Hardcover)
Eli Sands, aka Danger Boy, is able to time-travel by virtue of his unique molecular structure and critically important baseball cap. His friends are Clyne, an intelligent dinosaur from a different planet (ridiculously funny in a Jar-Jar sort of way), and the lovely Thea, from ancient Alexandria. Instant translator lingo-spots in their heads enable characters to understand those who do not share the same language, which is especially helpful when they get to the City of Jerusalem, year 583 B.C.E. The chapters are narrated by the three friends from different time periods and locations where they happen to be at the moment. Due to a lot of secrecy and espionage, it is difficult for the friends to discern who the bad guys are, which may or may not include the government, characters from the last book, and even Eli's parents. Getting separated and lost in time is only slightly less angstful for Eli compared to other things on his mind, such as, 'should he be liking Thea (age 14 to his 13) as a girlfriend'? This is a wildly creative work, and the reader will note with keen interest at how the author keeps this fascinating story together and running. Even with many references to episodes from the previous three books, there is no humdrum here. Readers get a large slice of history and they won't flinch a bit. In fact, they'll be looking for more. A molding of fantasy, historical and science fiction, you'll want to recommend this one, especially for the boys.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
bearded boy, slow pox, plasmechanical material, prime nexus, human mammals
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Earth Orange, House of David, Silver Eye, Danger Boy, Saurius Prime, Fifth Dimension, Green Bassett, San Francisco, New Orleans, Weeping Bat, Project Split Second, World War, Thomas Jefferson, Strong Bess, Rolf Royd, Bloody Tendon Wars, Satchel Paige, Rocket Royd, Valley of the Moon, Andrew Jackson Williams, Fort Point, Dragon Jerk, Silver Throat, National Weekly Truth, The Healer
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