The 39 Clues Superspecial:
Outbreak. By C. Alexander London. Scholastic. $13.99.
Swindle #8: Jingle. By Gordon
Korman. Scholastic. $16.99.
At long last The 39 Clues appears to be winding down.
This highly popular, multi-series sequence that helped promote the notion of
books as but one part of a multimedia experience requiring readers to do active
mystery-solving online as well as within the novels’ pages, has gone through
four complete book sequences, the most recent being Doublecross. Now comes what appears to be a single, standalone
novel designated Superspecial, titled
Outbreak, written by C. Alexander
London, who was also the author of the second Doublecross novel, Mission
Hindenburg. This Superspecial
differs from the series volumes in various ways, partly in price (it costs a dollar
more) and partly in its lack of accompanying cards (real or virtual) to be tied
into online activities – although it still provides a Web address at which
readers can “find exciting missions and connect with fellow Cahills.” In Outbreak, it is assumed that readers are
members of the super-powerful Cahill clan that has managed and manipulated
human history for many centuries. Readers need to be familiar with the overall
Cahill history for Outbreak to make
complete sense. Dan is currently the leader of the Cahills, and in this book is
14 years old (not 11 or 13, as in earlier series); that makes Amy 19, which
means she is almost an adult – another sign that this long-running sequence may
finally have run long enough. The story of Outbreak
is a familiar one in the usual twisty style of The 39 Clues, involving locations around the world, a deadly virus,
and a former friend named Sinead Sterling who turned traitor but may have
turned back to a Cahill supporter and may be trying to prevent release of the
virus instead of trying to arrange for it to destroy the world. The good-or-bad
uncertainty is part and parcel of The 39
Clues, as are the globe-hopping and the potentially nefarious deed
involving a possibly deadly substance of some sort. Having dutifully, if not
very stylishly, contributed to the series before, London pulls Outbreak along in all the expected
directions, avoiding any stamp of distinctive style (as all the authors in this
series must be careful to do) but being careful to produce enough cliffhangers
and turns to keep readers interested, if perhaps not really on edge.
Unsurprisingly, the book ends with a dramatic, painful and emotionally
wrenching sacrifice that is followed by a suitable twist. More surprisingly,
the book actually ends, rather than
concluding, as earlier volumes have, with distinct hints of where the series
will go next. That could mean The 39
Clues has gone about as far as it can go, or it could mean that future
entries will be self-contained, as Outbreak
is, rather than part of multi-book sequences. Either way, The 39 Clues has more than made its mark, and if Outbreak does not represent a highly
dramatic, bang-up ending, it does show the books concluding – if they have
concluded – in much the same way that they have progressed from the start.
Five of the books in The 39 Clues have been written by Gordon
Korman, but ever since Flashpoint,
the 2014 conclusion of the Unstoppable
series, he has turned his attention elsewhere – for instance, to the Swindle series, which has now reached
its eighth volume, Jingle. Yes, this
is a Christmas-themed novel, but otherwise it has all the characteristics of
its seven predecessors, ranging from the machinations of Griffin Bing (“the man
with the plan”) to the barely containable enthusiasm of the Doberman, Luthor. To
as great an extent as the books in The 39
Clues, those in the Swindle
series feature formulaic plotting and formulaic characters – which means that Jingle will be fun for those who already
know Griffin and his comrades, and will be a pretty good entry point to the
series for anyone who picks the book up, enjoys it simply as a seasonal read,
and at the end wants to know about other books along the same lines. In Jingle, the annoying Logan signs Griffin
and pals up without their consent to act as elves in Cedarville’s traditional
holiday performance, the Santa’s Workshop Holiday Spectacular. As usual, Logan
has his own reasons for this – he wants to be an actor and is trying to raise
his chances of getting into the North Shore Players group – but all that really
matters here is that the signup gets the plot going. That plot involves all
sorts of typical seasonal and Griffin-ish elements, such as a faintly
unpleasant biker playing Santa and the usual disagreeableness of abusive
classmate/nemesis Darren Vader. What turns this into a mystery – all the Swindle books are mysteries – is the theft
of the Star of Prague, a multimillion-dollar-artifact, from atop the tree in
the Colchester mansion. At the top of the list of suspects are Griffin and his
group, in light of their various over-planned adventures (and consequent
run-ins with the law) in the past. Of course this requires Griffin to come up
with a plan to find the real thief, and of course the plan needs to be
over-complicated and lead to even stronger suspicions being directed at Griffin
and company, and of course everything has to come to a climax when the precious
object is supposedly destroyed. But of course it is not, the culprit is found,
the various skeins of this yarn are suitably untangled, and the scene is set
for a new year that is as likely as not to contain another overdone-but-simplistic
adventure of Griffin and the gang.
No comments:
Post a Comment