From School Library Journal
Grade 4-6-- In this sequel to Double Trouble Squared (HBJ, 1991), the Starbuck children (two sets of telepathic twins) head to Florida where their father investigates toxic dumping. While he works, July and Liberty, 12, are plunged into mysteries involving dolphins and a strange boy with bandaged hands. As Charly and Molly, five, are also drawn into the intrigue, threads begin to come together. The culminating adventure and capture of the villains is exciting, but the story as a whole lacks focus. There are simply too many characters and ingredients in this mix: a "special needs" foster child, evil polluters, barqueros escaping from Cuba, dolphins that can communicate with humans, endangered turtles, telepathy, etc. July and Liberty are so nebulous in personality that by contrast the younger twins, who wear their pet lizards as "living jewelry," stand out as vividly believable little monsters. Although it enables them to communicate with the dolphins, the twins' telepathy is more a way of whispering behind grownups' backs than a solid element of fantasy. Readers looking for environmental suspense will do better with George's Missing ' Gator of Gumbo Limbo (HarperCollins, 1992). --Ruth S. Vose, San Francisco Public Library
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Review
Grade 4-6-- In this sequel to Double Trouble Squared (HBJ, 1991), the Starbuck children (two sets of telepathic twins) head to Florida where their father investigates toxic dumping. While he works, July and Liberty, 12, are plunged into mysteries involving dolphins and a strange boy with bandaged hands. As Charly and Molly, five, are also drawn into the intrigue, threads begin to come together. The culminating adventure and capture of the villains is exciting, but the story as a whole lacks focus. There are simply too many characters and ingredients in this mix: a "special needs" foster child, evil polluters, barqueros escaping from Cuba, dolphins that can communicate with humans, endangered turtles, telepathy, etc. July and Liberty are so nebulous in personality that by contrast the younger twins, who wear their pet lizards as "living jewelry," stand out as vividly believable little monsters. Although it enables them to communicate with the dolphins, the twins' telepathy is more a way of whispering behind grownups' backs than a solid element of fantasy. Readers looking for environmental suspense will do better with George's Missing ' Gator of Gumbo Limbo (HarperCollins, 1992). --Ruth S. Vose, San Francisco Public Library (
School Library Journal )
--This text refers to an alternate
Paperback
edition.