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Illegal aliens. Fiction.
Fathers and sons. Fiction.
Wrestlers. Fiction.
Escapes. Fiction.
To rescue his father from prison, 11-year-old Oliver "Spaghetti-O" Jones tries to get a little help from his favorite luchador.After months of legal woes, Oliver's father ends up in a Florida correctional center despite his assurances to Oliver and his irritable big sister, Louisa, that "[e]verything was going to be fine." Now Louisa won't even talk to their father, but Oliver's not giving up that easily. Inspired by his favorite luchador-turned-action hero, Tito the Bonecrusher (motto: "Never quit trying!"), Oliver needs to concoct a plan to bust his father out of prison. To do so, he must infiltrate a charity gala to meet the bombastic action star, who holds the know-how required for such a daring caper. Thomson's excellent middle-grade debut plumbs the absurdity and desperation inherent in a painful situation. Throughout the ordeal, Oliver battles and suppresses his grief and pain in a way that younger readers can recognize and perhaps understand amid the humor; more than anything, it's this implicit focus that makes this novel a great one. Going along for the tumultuous ride is Oliver's best friend, Brain (a girl genius), and some unexpected allies. Each scheme (celebrity photos with forged signatures, skipping detention via a decoy) seems more outrageous than the last, but when the day of the gala arrives, will Oliver have what it takes to save the day? A white default is assumed.An uplifting gem. (Fiction. 8-11)
ALA BooklistFifth-grader Oliver's divorced dad is headed for prison (for unspecified financial chicanery), but of course he must be innocent. Who better to consult on an escape plan than pro wrestler and action film star Tito the Bonecrusher, whose movies all involve rescuing hostages or captives? With this line of reasoning, Oliver and his capable best friend Brianna, aptly nicknamed Brain, launch a complex scheme to crash a charity ball that the always-masked hero is scheduled to attend, while, unsurprisingly, keeping parents, stepparents, and school officials in the dark. It would be fair to say that everything proceeds to go amiss, though help from unexpected allies and one humongous coincidence balances the scales. Thomson endows her protagonist with an emotional intelligence that plays uncomfortably against both his naïveté and his unappealing habit of cheating on tests, copying homework, and lying to teachers without more than passing flickers of guilt. Still, his mishaps, his intense hero worship, and the multiple elements of wish fulfillment in his quixotic agenda will strike sympathetic chords in middle-grade readers.
Horn BookFifth grader Oliver is obsessed with Tito the Bonecrusher, a former lucha libre wrestler turned action-movie star. When Oliver's father is jailed for tax fraud, he seeks the celebrity's help to break his dad out of prison. Some readers may balk at the naiveti of Oliver's plan and the coincidental plot threads, but Oliver's confusion, anger, and desperation are treated with compassion and authenticity.
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)To rescue his father from prison, 11-year-old Oliver "Spaghetti-O" Jones tries to get a little help from his favorite luchador.After months of legal woes, Oliver's father ends up in a Florida correctional center despite his assurances to Oliver and his irritable big sister, Louisa, that "[e]verything was going to be fine." Now Louisa won't even talk to their father, but Oliver's not giving up that easily. Inspired by his favorite luchador-turned-action hero, Tito the Bonecrusher (motto: "Never quit trying!"), Oliver needs to concoct a plan to bust his father out of prison. To do so, he must infiltrate a charity gala to meet the bombastic action star, who holds the know-how required for such a daring caper. Thomson's excellent middle-grade debut plumbs the absurdity and desperation inherent in a painful situation. Throughout the ordeal, Oliver battles and suppresses his grief and pain in a way that younger readers can recognize and perhaps understand amid the humor; more than anything, it's this implicit focus that makes this novel a great one. Going along for the tumultuous ride is Oliver's best friend, Brain (a girl genius), and some unexpected allies. Each scheme (celebrity photos with forged signatures, skipping detention via a decoy) seems more outrageous than the last, but when the day of the gala arrives, will Oliver have what it takes to save the day? A white default is assumed.An uplifting gem. (Fiction. 8-11)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)Fifth grader Oliver believes his father when he says he will be at Oliver-s sister-s high school graduation despite his legal troubles. But two months before the event, Oliver-s dad, who lives in Florida while the kids reside with their mother in Virginia, faces two years in prison. The siblings are furious and in shock, but Oliver-s best friend -Brain- points out what Oliver needs: help from their hero, the luchador turned movie star Tito the Bonecrusher. Tito can rescue people from anywhere and has helped fans in the past, so who better to help them get Oliver-s father out of prison? As luck would have it, Tito is appearing at a fund-raiser in their Virginia town in two weeks-Oliver and Brain just have to find a way to meet him there. When their first plans go awry, the two, plus Oliver-s sister, get help from a new friend and an old nemesis. The protagonist-s faith in his hero resonates, as does his denial that his father has done something wrong. An engaging and entertaining story that sensitively explores the challenge of seeing flaws in oneself and those one admires. Ages 8-12. Agent: Lara Perkins, Andrea Brown Literary Agency. (Mar.)
Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews
ALA Booklist
Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books
Horn Book
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
In Melissa Thomson's first standalone middle-grade novel, the beloved author of the Keena Ford chapter book series delivers a funny yet moving story about fathers, sons, and criminal justice. Oliver "Spaghetti-O" Jones's dad is about to be jailed for a crime he didn't commit, and Oliver believes the only way to save him is with the help of his favorite lucha-libre wrestler turned action star, Tito the Bonecrusher. Together with his best friend, Brianna (a.k.a. "Brain"), and their new ally Paul "Popcorn" Robards, Oliver devises a madcap plan to spring his dad from a Florida correctional facility. Heartwarming and hilarious, this book looks at what it takes to be a hero . . . and what happens when you realize that saving the day might not always be possible.