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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful light read with big ideas
I loved this little book! Had seen the previews of the movie, and wanted to read the story. It is a charming tale of a divorced father who can't seem to hold onto a job, down on his luck, trying to do his best with his son, who lives with his mom - He finally gets a lead on a job: a night watchman at a museum filled with many wonderful exhibits. He gets the job, and to...
Published on December 1, 2006 by ellen

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0 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Double P-U!
I bought this horribly written little book for my grandchildren to read before the DVD comes out next week. I read it first - sorry that I did. It stinks! It is written so badly that even a little child would be bored. If the movie is as bad as the book it is no wonder that it became a DVD so quickly. Do not bother with this poorly written rot.
Published on April 18, 2007 by Sandy Rhoad


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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful light read with big ideas, December 1, 2006
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This review is from: Night at the Museum: The Junior Novelization (Paperback)
I loved this little book! Had seen the previews of the movie, and wanted to read the story. It is a charming tale of a divorced father who can't seem to hold onto a job, down on his luck, trying to do his best with his son, who lives with his mom - He finally gets a lead on a job: a night watchman at a museum filled with many wonderful exhibits. He gets the job, and to his amazement, the statues come to life at night! How he manages to bring harmony to his life and the museum is charming - It may be for young people, but the message is for everyone -
Would I love to visit that museum!
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5.0 out of 5 stars Manifest Destiny at Home in the Heart, January 3, 2007
This review is from: Night at the Museum: The Junior Novelization (Paperback)
One age's veni, vidi, vici is another's Manifest Destiny. History is a sequence of stories about one person taking what he wants from another just because he can. It's about the effects of unbridled power. The lesson we all know but never quite process is that we're doomed to repeat the history we don't learn from. We're doomed because the unlearned lessons are about the pain and misery that result from limited knowledge and understanding. These are the limits that kill off the part of us that can empathize with others.

Night at the Museum produced by 20th Century Fox turns the dry thoughts of the above paragraph into an adventure in which T-rex skeletons, wax figures--larger than life, life size, and miniature--and mummies come to life after hours to challenge the perceptions of the new night guard, a divorced ne'er do well on the verge of losing his son to the highly successful bond-trader boyfriend of his ex-wife--herself a non-stop critic of her son's father, Larry.

Played by Ben Stiller, Larry Daley can't seem to get out from under the various forms of despair he experiences until he meets Teddy Roosevelt, played sensitively and humorously by Robin Williams. Teddy is the paragon of honest curiosity, initiative, and courage who mentors Larry in his early days as night watchman. Because Robin Williams is Teddy, he is a very funny wise old sage on horseback in love with Sacagawea under glass.

Night at the Museum appeals to the desire for adventure and romance--Larry loves the Carla the Docent, Teddy loves the Scout--without the violence and sex that can leave a person feeling trampled as the credits roll. There's some violence and the chase that makes an adventure flic worthy of its name, and it's just right. The chase is set in motion by Cecil, Gus, and Reginald the three night guards that Larry has replaced--Dick Van Dyke, Mickey Rooney, and Bill Cobbs, respectively.

Larry does not conquer his demons in the end. He deals with them and they learn to dance with each other and life gets good. And he and his son share a secret that even the neurotic ex-wife won't be able to dismantle.
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0 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Double P-U!, April 18, 2007
By 
Sandy Rhoad "Insatiable reader" (Branchville, SC United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Night at the Museum: The Junior Novelization (Paperback)
I bought this horribly written little book for my grandchildren to read before the DVD comes out next week. I read it first - sorry that I did. It stinks! It is written so badly that even a little child would be bored. If the movie is as bad as the book it is no wonder that it became a DVD so quickly. Do not bother with this poorly written rot.
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1 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars night at the museum, January 18, 2007
This review is from: Night at the Museum: The Junior Novelization (Paperback)
Night at the museum
3 stars HHH
By: Leslie Goldman, Thomas Lennon and Robert Ben Gerent




If you like adventures and fantasy this is your kind of book.

Larry has been looking for a job since he got fired. He is very unsuccessful and always gives up. Larry is divorced and his son is having a hard time. Then one day Larry went to his ex-wife's house to pick up his son Nicky to got to his hockey game and saw a help sigh in the window at the new York museum. The next day Larry drove to the museum and asks for the application for the job the job was for the night security guard.
When Larry was done and handed it to the front desk and the ladies said now go to the security office to the right and up the steps and to the left you will see a door that says security only. When he was walking up the halls he gets lost (Larry is not very smart) and asks a lady were the security room is (Larry admires her!) and she guides him the office. When Larry opened the door and saw 3 old coots. One of the men handed Larry the gear ands said jobs tomato. On the next day Larry went to the museum in his suit ready for the job and went to the security room and one of the old men said (when the lights go off the museum is on).





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Night at the Museum: The Junior Novelization
Night at the Museum: The Junior Novelization by Leslie Goldman (Paperback - November 1, 2006)
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