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Council of Evil (Villain.Net) [Paperback]

Andy Briggs (Author)
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Villain.Net
School bully Jake Hunter receives a mysterious email inviting him to join a scheme for world domination. With unlimited power and wealth at his fingertips, how can he resist? But to get it he has to become an arch-criminal, entangled in a plan that threatens the planet. And that could just be a step too far ...'Council of Evil' is the first book in the action packed new anti-series 'VILLAIN.NET' - the perfect antidote to the series 'HERO.COM', also by screenwriter Andy Briggs. Which side are you on?

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Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal

Grade 4–8—This book explores the origins of the nemeses of the heroes featured in the Hero.com series. The book's promotional Web site uses unwieldy URLs—www.heroorvillianbooks.com and www.whichsideareyouonbooks.com—but the online content is slickly presented nonetheless. Jake Hunter is the leader of a gang of bullies at his middle school. However, despite his callous treatment of those he considers beneath him, he is ultimately a sympathetic character. When he stumbles upon a Web site with supernatural powers, the computer screen literally morphs into a gray appendage and taps him on the forehead, imbuing him with up to four powers at a time. Flying and the ability to hurl lightning bolts or acid are a few of the powers that Jake decides to try. Basilisk, his supervillain mentor, manipulates him time and time again into physical showdowns with armed military forces to forward his own nefarious schemes. Epic battles no doubt inspired by blockbuster action films crackle with energy, and the excitement pops off the pages. Plenty of stunning reversals are heaped on readers toward the latter half of the book, ratcheting up the dramatic tension. Kids who enjoy DC and Marvel style superheroes will like this superhero comic in novel format. Featuring plenty of fight sequences, secrets, and advanced or prototype technology, this book will appeal to fans of Alex Rider or Danger Boy.—Madigan McGillicuddy, Los Angeles Public Library END --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

Review

`'VILLAIN.NET' made me the man I am today.' She-Hulk

`With "VILLAIN.NET" I found life again after my husband's death.' The Black Widow

`A rattling adventure . . . every aspiring supervillain should have a copy.' Abomination

`I'll get you, you pesky Council of Evil . . . arrrrggghhh . . .' Dr Doom (last words before he was annihilated by the Council of Evil)

Product Details

  • Paperback: 192 pages
  • Publisher: Oxford Childrens (June 5, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0192755447
  • ISBN-13: 978-0192755445
  • Product Dimensions: 7.6 x 5 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 7 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #4,825,304 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Andy is officially rebooting TARZAN - bringing a fresh take to the beloved Edgar Rice Burroughs character for a new generation of readers. It will be published in Summer 2011, with another following during the Tarzan Centenary in 2012.

Andy started writing with his brother Peter Briggs - working on movie projects such as "JUDGE DREDD and "FREDDY VS JASON" and "FOREVERMAN" for Spiderman creator Stan Lee and legendary producer Robert Evans.

Andy went on to work with Gregory Novac and Bruce Timm on Warner Bros. "AQUAMAN" - while at the same time landing an eight-book deal with Oxford University Press for "HERO.COM" and "VILLAIN.NET". His childhood love of comics continues as he writes them - his first graphic novel RITUAL published by Markosia Comics, with more to come in 2011.

Currently he's working on several screenplays and getting ready to produce his first feature film.

 

Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.5 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Wonderful Addition To The Superhero Genre, June 3, 2009
By 
Jake Hunter is recruited for Villain.net through an email offering him the power to rule the world. After clicking on an icon featuring a radiation symbol, he sets fire to the art classroom in a fit of anger. Rescuing the art teacher from the burning building, Jake emerges from the incident a hero, even though he knows it was his superpowers that caused the accident.

Later that evening, Jake meets a mysterious man at the abandoned steel mill who is wearing a hood that hides his features and calls himself Basilisk. He requests Jake's assistance on a dangerous mission stealing a machine from a scientific institute designed to bore to the center of the earth. Jake complies, though he doesn't really understand why Basilisk wants the machine.

Using the superpowers Basilisk has given him, Jake swoops into the compound avoiding defense missiles and securing the machine. But when Basilisk tells him to "deal with the witnesses," Jake draws the line at killing.

When Jake questions Basilisk's purpose and identity, Basilisk tells Jake that he is a supervillain. "Bad is such a clichéd black-and-white view of the world," Basilisk says. "We just have different opinions. And when those opinions conflict and the majority's cherished beliefs, then they label us as `the bad guys....' It is not a battle between good and evil, there is no such thing. It is merely a battle of wills, a battle for power."

Jake gladly joins the battle. He loves the feeling of mastery he gets from his superpowers and enjoys the secret double life he leads outside his boring existence with his family and friends. While he continues to question Basilisk's methods and purposes, he justifies each individual act of villainy in terms of what he can gain in skill and power.

It is only toward the end of COUNCIL OF EVIL that Jake realizes how manipulated and compromised he has become. He discovers that Basilisk has lied to him systematically about their mission. His friends from school betray him in their own bid for power. His family's memory is erased so they no longer remember him or the damage he has caused. His body is irrevocably changed by the superpowers he has had coursing through him. But even as Jake faces the possibility of prison time, his thoughts still turn to control and revenge.

In Villain.net Andy Briggs has created a compelling picture of a young person with charisma and leadership abilities who has become warped by his own relentless fears and need for power. Several surprise twists at the end of the book, along with Jake's ability to justify almost any action, make for a gripping read.

Villain.net and its companion series, Hero.com, are wonderful additions to the superhero genre. Told with insight and humor, the books share characters and events, but can easily be read as stand-alone titles. The question is whether or not you would want to read just one when given such an intriguing pairing for this promising new series.

--- Reviewed by Sarah A. Wood
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Courtesy of Teens Read Too, October 21, 2009
Jake Hunter is your average bully - until one computer class leads him to a mysterious website.

The website allows him to download superpowers. When a teacher mistakingly witnesses him bullying a much younger student, Jake must serve detention. When Jake attempts to unsuccessfully explain the truth, rage pulses through him.

Green energy radiates from his body, rendering the teacher unconscious in addition to causing the destruction of the classroom. In a wavering decision, after escaping, Jake rushes back in to save the teacher.

He's hailed as a hero, but one person knows the truth and sends him an email message with a meeting time and location. Jake arrives there to hear an offer he can't refuse. He's about to become the world's most sought after villain.

Jake Hunter's journey into the super-villains is only the beginning. An alternate side has also been discovered in RISE OF THE HEROES. Readers will recognize a few crossover characters that will deepen the plot of both novels. The evil storyline moves along quickly, and it's a fun read for middle schoolers interested in comic books or who love rooting for the bad guys.

Reviewed by: Jennifer Rummel
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Evil Is More Interesting, July 4, 2009
By 
fredtownward "The Analytical Mind; Have Brain... (Mocksville, North Carolina, United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
This is only a partial review, based upon the first three chapters of this book included in the prepublication copy of Rise of the Heroes, but I deemed it worth reviewing because it appears to be the better book.

Perhaps it is because Rise of the Heroes has too many main characters; perhaps, because evil characters are so often more interesting; or perhaps, because it was Mr. Briggs second book. Whatever the reason I was left a lot more interested in finding out what happened to Jake Hunter "your quintessential school bully" as he continues upon Joseph Campbell's Hero's Journey than I would be in reading another adventure involving The Cliche-Tastic Four.
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