2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Courtesy of Teens Read Too, December 19, 2008
Leon and his friends have a problem.
Just as they are assigned to come up with a monument for their gifted pool group, they learn a terrible truth. Their favorite coffee shop, Sip, could be going out of business.
Sip has been struggling against its big corporate competitor, Wackfords, another coffee chain downtown, and it's quickly losing the battle.
Leon and his friends don't like this and decide to take matters into their own hands. With some help from the Wackfords manager (who is surprisingly like Leon and his friends) they form a plan to save Sip.
However, you know what they say about even the best laid plans....
This book is smart and very, very funny. Readers will love going through this fight with Leon and find him as easy to relate to as a best friend.
Reviewed by: Michaela Pallante aka "Mickey"
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The story of a small-time business battling the superstores, June 15, 2008
Adam Selzer's PIRATES OF THE RETAIL WASTELAND tells of a favorite coffee shop about to be put out of business by a corporate chain - and the efforts of a band of wacky gifted patrons to save it. With much tongue-in-cheek the story of a small-time business battling the superstores makes for a zany quest that is hilarious and fun.
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0 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
eh..., May 10, 2010
This was a short and very amusing novel, with likeable characters. Though, every time I read this sort of story, I have to wonder if families as wacky and goofy as the one depicted here actually exist in the real world. One thing is certain, I don't remember my own circle of friends back in junior high as being quite so imaginative or funny as the characters in this book are.
The writing style is fine, but I have to say unfortunately the plot didn't interest me in the least, and it kind of fizzles out to a pointless conclusion. So, this book gets an "eh" reaction from me overall despite its positive qualities and I can't say I particularly recommend it. This is a companion novel to another story about the same characters titled
How to Get Suspended and Influence People, so perhaps I would have enjoyed that one more? The author also wrote
I Kissed a Zombie, and I Liked It which does sound very funny; I'll have to try that one sometime.
This book reminded me, once again, that I'm a bit out of touch with modern teenagers. (The only teens I really know are my own niece and nephews; don't spend much time with kids that age as a rule.) I often am unable to figure out what age range any given teen novel is appropriate for. This book, for instance, contains a generous variety of swear words/vulgar terms---just about all of the major ones, in fact, except for "the big one." And to me, vulgar language just seems so unnecessary in books aimed at kids aged 12-14, like this one is. Do all kids today really talk like this, and am I being hopelessly old-fashioned? Man, I'm getting old; I know books weren't written like this when I was that age!
I like the dust jacket on this one; very nicely designed.
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