The Bad Guys #2: Mission
Unpluckable. By Aaron Blabey. Scholastic. $5.99.
Bird & Squirrel on Fire.
By James Burks. Graphix/Scholastic. $9.99.
Aaron Blabey’s The Bad Guys series is just settling in
for what looks to be a long stay. This delightful heap of ridiculousness posits
that four known do-badders want to become do-gooders, led by Mr. Wolf and
including Mr. Snake, Mr. Shark and Mr. Piranha. In their first outing, the four
managed to make a mess of pretty much everything through a series of missteps
that led to the eventual freeing of all the dogs imprisoned in the local dog
pound – the point being that the dogs fled out of fear of the
bad-guys-turned-good-guys. Mission
Unpluckable picks up there, with a rehash of the end of the first book, as
intrepid TV reporter Tiffany Fluffit talks about the “crazed gang” whose attack
caused “200 terrified puppy dogs to run away in fright.” This does not make Mr. Wolf, leader of this
particular pack, happy – nor is Mr. Piranha overjoyed at being described, and
not for the first time, as a mutant sardine of some kind. Clearly the gang
needs to do something even better than rescuing dogs, and Mr. Wolf has just the
thing: break into a local chicken farm and let the poultry out. The idea seems
as silly to the other characters as it will to readers – although Mr. Snake
proves super-enthusiastic about the job because he, well, eats chickens. He therefore shouts “Let’s go!” no fewer than 13 times,
in ever-larger type, before Mr. Wolf reveals that there are some difficulties
with the plan: this particular chicken farm, in which the chickens are confined
constantly in cages and generally treated cruelly, is heavily guarded; also, it
has 30-foot-high steel walls that are eight feet thick, plus floor and wall
alarms, plus laser beams, and more. Obviously someone with a high level of
technical knowledge would be needed to disarm the place – and luckily, Mr. Wolf
knows just such a someone, in the form of yet another bad guy who is willing to
try being good: Mr. Tarantula. But…well,
it turns out that Mr. Tarantula scares all
the other gang members, especially Mr. Shark, who promptly faints with the
words “Spider…with no pants…on my head…” Hmm. Clearly this is going to be some
sort of team-building thing, along the lines of the best “caper” dramas. And so
it is – including scenes of self-sacrifice (Mr. Piranha voluntarily placing
himself inside a sardine sandwich), personality turnarounds (Mr. Snake coughing
up all the chickens he ate and doing something heroic to make up for following
his bad-guy nature), and best-guy-buddy stuff (Mr. Tarantula and Mr. Shark, of
course). The books in The Bad Guys
series are not quite graphic novels and not quite comic books: the drawings
propel the action, but the layout is that of amply illustrated word-driven
books rather than comics or graphic novels. Whatever they may be, these books
are hilariously silly. At the conclusion of Mission
Unpluckable, Mr. Wolf suddenly notices a creepy house near the now-empty
chicken farm, but it is empty except for a box containing an utterly adorable
“widdle guinea pig” that the gang rescues as an afterthought to their chicken
release. Hoo boy, is that going to turn
out to be a mistake – as Blabey shows in a look ahead toward the next book in
the series, in which the cute little furball will be revealed as a menacing
monster and a “REALLY bad guy.” But
that shall be then. Mission Unpluckable
is now.
It is easy to see where
Blabey’s books are going, but not so simple to tell what James Burks has
planned for his Bird & Squirrel
graphic-novel series, a trilogy that is now in its fourth book. Yes, this is
the fourth of three. First there was Bird
& Squirrel on the Run, in which the opposite-personality title
characters met and became friends, both of them avoiding Cat, who was intent on
eating them. Then came Bird &
Squirrel on Ice, in which the friends crash-landed at the South Pole and
Bird was mistaken for the predicted Chosen One, who would rid the penguins of
the threat of a killer whale by himself becoming whale food. And then came the
supposed end of the trilogy, Bird &
Squirrel on the Edge! In the third book, the friends headed home, stopping
along the way to save the life of a bear cub threatened by wolves; here the two
had a temporary personality reversal, with Bird
being afraid of everything for a change and Squirrel
being the brave-to-the-point-of-recklessness character. Eventually the friends’
personalities were switched back and the two made it home, happier and wiser
and all that sort of thing, encountering the cub’s mother at just the right
point so the bears could have a happy ending as well. The end? Umm…nope. In Bird & Squirrel on Fire, the
adventure takes place at home, after the characters have returned to
normal life, or tried to. And it is a big adventure, much like the first three,
involving mysterious disappearances, an underground labyrinth, an evil pack
stalking the good guys (rats rather than wolves this time), a strange beaver
whose gigantic dam has cut off all the other animals’ water, and an adorable
red squirrel named Red who becomes an actual love interest for Squirrel. The
book’s title refers to a climactic blaze that forces the title characters into
super-heroic mode once again, eventually brings all the animals together, and
leads to the disappearance and presumed demise of Bird – which of course does not happen, this being a book for
comparatively young readers, for whom it would
not do to lay on too much angst. Actually, the Bird & Squirrel
series is a good entry point to graphic novels for younger readers: the stories
are simple, the characterization is straightforward, the art is attractive and
unchallenging, the colors are bright, and the use of panels that have different
shapes and mesh into each other at times while bursting the bounds of their
edges at others helps keep the action well-paced. And this time the Bird &
Squirrel series is clearly, obviously finished and final and ended in a
thoroughly satisfactory way – although, hmm, that was true after the previous
book, too, so who really knows?
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