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Pet Robots [Hardcover]

Scott Christian Sava (Author), Diego Jourdan (Author)
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Four students- Jake, Chris, Tammy, and Tommy- get lost while on a field trip to the Rooty Tooty Toy Company. That night they re followed home by four military robots, Skye, Rock, Aqua, and Wind. Now, the owner of the Rooty Tooty Toy Company wants his robots back and he s willing to do anything to get them. This delightful All Ages book is fun for everyone...especially new readers in grade school.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

Writer Scott Christian Sava starts each of his books by asking what if some cool situation happened to a kid? In Pet Robots, the situation is you guessed it getting a pet robot. Four of them, to be exact.

The story starts with a class field trip to the Rooty Tooty Toy Company. A quartet of kids brainy Jake, cell-phone addict Tommy, game freak Tammy, and nose-picker Chris are separated from the rest of their class and wind up in a part of the factory that probably wasn t intended for the public: The rooms they go to are filled with pushy talking teddy bears, green slime, and poop. (Yes, there is a room filled with poop. No, I don t know why, but the target audience will probably find this hilarious.) In the last room, they find four robots and sort-of-accidentally activate them, which causes the robots to scan the children and imprint their preferences.

Unaware of this, the kids rejoin their class and go home, only to discover later that the robots have followed them. What starts out to be a little scary ends up awesome, as the robots transform into whatever the kids want a skateboard for Tammy, a dune buggy for Tommy, a motorcycle for Chris and hustle to grant their every wish. It s all good fun until the comically evil chairman of the toy company sends his private army to retrieve his toys. That s when the robots demonstrate their defensive powers, disarming the goons with jets of water, blasts of wind, and super robot strength.

Pet Robots has a Willy Wonka vibe to it, with its weird toy factory and clownlike villain. At its heart, though, this is a simple book. The story is straightforward and unfolds cleanly, one episode at a time. The creators have a nice sense of comic timing, often having a character discover something or react to a surprise over a series of smaller panels. And while the main characters are well-rounded, no one strays too far from their personality type.

Jourdan s art has a pleasing, art-deco quality to it, making use of simple shapes and repetition to create characters and backgrounds. The art was obviously done on a computer, and a few pages look overly digitized, with zigzag lines, obvious stretching of the images, or drastic variations in line weight. These flaws will be more noticeable to adults than children, though, and they don t interfere with the flow of the book.

Reading Pet Robots is a lot like watching a cartoon: There is plenty of action as well as verbal humor, the lines between good and evil are clearly drawn, and the bad guys are comically humiliated in the end. --graphicnovelreporter.com/ --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

About the Author

Scott Christian Sava has worked on such television, film, comic book, and video game titles such as Spider-Man, Casper the Friendly Ghost, Aliens vs. Predators, X-Men...and so much more in his career as an illustrator, comic book artist, animator, and video game designer. In 2000, Scott formed the animation company, Blue Dream Studios. And in 2006, Blue Dream Studios opened up it's first publishing division with such titles as critically acclaimed The Dreamland Chronicles, Ed's Terrestrials, and Pet Robots.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 168 pages
  • Publisher: Blue Dream Studios; 1st edition (July 4, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0978916824
  • ISBN-13: 978-0978916824
  • Product Dimensions: 10.3 x 6.7 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #4,732,852 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

The story of Scott
Christian Sava and his pursuit of Happily Ever After...

Once upon a time, an animator in the faraway land of
Hollywood made wondrous
television and film
characters seemingly come to life.

As more and more studios saw this animator's work, his studio grew and grew. But this animator (we'll call him Scott) wanted to tell his own stories.

So Scott converted his
animation studio, called Blue Dream Studios, into a
publishing and toy company.
Now he could make his own characters come to life in books and toys for
everyone to enjoy.

Scott and his family soon found themselves in the magical kingdom of Franklin, Tennessee, where he often has adventures with his twin sons Brendan and Logan in the backyard where many strange
creatures lurk.

After marrying the fair princess Donna long, long ago...Scott is living the 'Happily Ever After' part of his story by doing exactly what he loves to do...tell stories

 

Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
5 star:
 (3)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Lot Like Watching a Cartoon, November 24, 2009
This review is from: Pet Robots (Paperback)
Writer Scott Christian Sava starts each of his books by asking "what if some cool situation happened to a kid?" In Pet Robots, the situation is--you guessed it--getting a pet robot. Four of them, to be exact.

The story starts with a class field trip to the Rooty Tooty Toy Company. A quartet of kids--brainy Jake, cell-phone addict Tommy, game freak Tammy, and nose-picker Chris--are separated from the rest of their class and wind up in a part of the factory that probably wasn't intended for the public: The rooms they go to are filled with pushy talking teddy bears, green slime, and poop. (Yes, there is a room filled with poop. No, I don't know why, but the target audience will probably find this hilarious.) In the last room, they find four robots and sort-of-accidentally activate them, which causes the robots to scan the children and imprint their preferences.

Unaware of this, the kids rejoin their class and go home, only to discover later that the robots have followed them. What starts out to be a little scary ends up awesome, as the robots transform into whatever the kids want--a skateboard for Tammy, a dune buggy for Tommy, a motorcycle for Chris--and hustle to grant their every wish. It's all good fun until the comically evil chairman of the toy company sends his private army to retrieve his toys. That's when the robots demonstrate their defensive powers, disarming the goons with jets of water, blasts of wind, and super robot strength.

Pet Robots has a Willy Wonka vibe to it, with its weird toy factory and clownlike villain. At its heart, though, this is a simple book. The story is straightforward and unfolds cleanly, one episode at a time. The creators have a nice sense of comic timing, often having a character discover something or react to a surprise over a series of smaller panels. And while the main characters are well-rounded, no one strays too far from their personality type.

Jourdan's art has a pleasing, art-deco quality to it, making use of simple shapes and repetition to create characters and backgrounds. The art was obviously done on a computer, and a few pages look overly digitized, with zigzag lines, obvious stretching of the images, or drastic variations in line weight. These flaws will be more noticeable to adults than children, though, and they don't interfere with the flow of the book.

Reading Pet Robots is a lot like watching a cartoon: There is plenty of action as well as verbal humor, the lines between good and evil are clearly drawn, and the bad guys are comically humiliated in the end.

-- Brigid Alverson
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars FUN KIDS TITLE, December 31, 2007
This review is from: Pet Robots (Hardcover)
Pet Robots is a delightful hardcover graphic novel from Blue Dream Studios. Four classmates: Jake, Chris, Tammy, and Tommy are touring a toy factory with their class when they make a wrong turn and get lost. While trying to find the rest of the class they encounter many strange rooms along the way, including one filled with four life-size robots who don't exactly look like toys. Back at home, the kids find the four robots have followed them home, each drawn to one of the four children. The kids give their new robot friends nicknames: Rock, Aqua, Wind, and Skye and become fast friends. Everyone is happy except for the toy factory owner, Mr. Meisterburger...he wants his robots back and will stop at nothing to achieve his goal. He'll soon unleash his greatest robot, Destructo (who looks kind of like a Mazinger robot) on the children. This is really a great book. Aimed at a younger audience but great entertainment for the family. The cartooning of Diego Jourdan is very clean and well done, and would make a great cartoon. It's a fast-paced story and a nice way to introduce younger readers to comics.

REVIEWED BY TIM JANSON
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5.0 out of 5 stars So much fun!, March 4, 2009
This review is from: Pet Robots (Paperback)
I love kids books, I just love them. This is one of my favorites. It combines adventure, mischief, and geekyness into a great story. Lot's of fun with kids or without.
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