Available Formats
How Lunchbox Jones Saved Me from Robots, Traitors, and Missy the Cruel
By (Author) Jennifer Brown
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Childrens Books
23rd September 2015
United States
Children
Fiction
Childrens / Teenage fiction: General, modern and contemporary fiction
Childrens / Teenage fiction: Humorous stories
FIC
Commended for Texas Lone Star Reading List 2016
Hardback
240
Width 140mm, Height 210mm
338g
For fans of Gordon Korman and Jack Gantos comes the ultimate, middle-grade redemption story, where losers are the real winners. Forest Shade Middle School is the losing-est school in the history of losing. And that's just fine for Luke Abbott, who'd rather be at home playing video games and avoiding his older brother Rob and the Greatest Betrayal of All Time. But now hes being forced to join the robotics team and spend his afternoons with Mikayla, the girl who does everything with her toes; Jacob and Jacob, who aren't twins but might as well be; the sunflower seed-obsessed Stuart; and Missy the Cruel, Luke's innocent-looking bully since they were six-years-old. But it's an unlikely connection with a mysterious boy known only as Lunchbox Jones" that will change Luke's life. When Lunchbox Jones blue tin goes missing, followed by the boy himself, Luke races to find his new friend in time to save their team!
With humor and heart, Brown tells a story of unlikely friendship. Readers who enjoyed Lisa Yees Warp Speed (2011) or Jeffrey Browns Star Wars: Jedi Academy series will find a similar brand of humor here. * Booklist Online *
Theres nothing robotic about Lunchbox Jones. Its a keenly-observed slice of middle-school life, told with plenty of humor and heart . . . and, okay, robots. -- #1 NEW YORK TIMES bestselling author Gordon Korman
Though they may not shine in the robotics department, Luke and his team succeed in other ways in this likable comedy. * Kirkus Reviews *
A winning blend of humorous and poignant moments. . . Lukes struggles with his brothers choices will resonate with readers facing a complex and uncertain world, while his comically agonized musings. . . Will keep them entertained. * Publishers Weekly *
The friendship between Arty and Cash is both preposterous and completely believable. Ultimately Life on Mars isn't about making connections to other planets so much as making them across the street. -- Kurtis Scaletta, author of MUDVILLE and JINXED!, on LIFE ON MARS
The comic byplay is often nicely gross, and the science talk dovetails with current pedagogical fads. * Kirkus Reviews on LIFE ON MARS *
Jennifer Brown is the author of another middle-grade novel, Life on Mars, as well as the highly-acclaimed YA novels Hate List, Bitter End, Perfect Escape, and Thousand Words. She lives with her family in Kansas City, Missouri. www.jenniferbrownauthor.com @JenBrownBooks