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Book Review

Publisher's Note:

Thirteen-year-old Quest (Q) isn't sure he's ready for a new family. For a long time it's just been him and his mom, Blaze. But everything changes when Blaze falls in love with Roger and they start a new rock band called Match. Now they're married, have a hit record, and Match is going out on a year-long driving tour across the country. Q, along with new stepsister Angela, will take a year off from school and travel with the band. For now, home will be a luxury motor coach and homework will be a Web site diary of their travels. Perfect-Q can practice his magic tricks and Angela can read her spy novels. What can go wrong? As Q and Angela settle into their new life and new relationship as siblings, they start to notice that certain coincidences don't seem coincidental. For example, how does a band roadie named Boone find them in the middle of a desert where their coach just happens to break down? Why does a man from their parents' wedding keep showing up in the same cities they stop at? When they reach Philadelphia, Q and Angela realize this tour is definitely not the trip their parents had planned and that the "City of Brotherly Love" is full of mysteries and secrets that could threaten their new life together. In addition to his action adventure books, Roland is the author of many award-winning books for children including Journey of the Red Wolf; The Captain's Dog: My Journey with the Lewis and Clark Tribe; and Thunder Cave, which was a 1996 Notable Children's Trade Book in the field of Social Studies. His books with Slee…

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I, Q

by Roland Smith

Overall Book Review:

I, Q: Independence Hall by Roland Smith is book one in a six book series. It is an action/adventure/spy thriller that would be enjoyed especially by tweens; however, with a thirteen-yea- old male protagonist and a fifteen-year-old female protagonist, this book will have a strong older audience reach and good male-female reader appeal, too. This book is primarily told from the first person of Q (short for Quest).  It has plenty of intrigue, characters with unclear motives and alliances, and action.  Think Jason Borne for young readers.  The main characters are both resourceful and likeable.  This is a fun, fast read, but have the next book in the series handy because it doesn’t end on the final page, but rather pauses and sets up for the next round of action.


Content Analysis:

Profanity/Language:  1 religious exclamation.

Violence/Gore:  Report parent killed by bomb; report of bomb death; report that someone was beaten, tortured, and is dead; report that a character was stabbed, bleeding, and died; car rams another car resulting in injury, bleeding, “half of left ear was missing”, hitting a character with a vehicle; vehicle chase; character uses martial arts to injure other characters; report of a character attacking a boat with a baseball bat; undetailed report of death; report of being rendered unconscious; character is “tempted” to stick a knife in someone’s thigh; teenage character held at knife point by an adult and is cut on neck to draw blood; verbal threats to harm/kill.

Sex/Nudity: None

Mature Subject Matter:

Death of a parent, remarriage, treason, lying, terrorist activity, espionage.

Alcohol / Drug Use:

None

Overall Book Rating
Profanity/Language
Rating:
1
10
Violence/Gore
Rating:
2
10
Sex/Nudity
Rating:
0
10

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About the Reviewer

An accountant and CPA by profession, I found myself a book reviewer for Squeaky Clean Reads by happenstance. When the opportunity came to transform that website into Compass Book Ratings, I was excited to seize it and meld my business background with my love of books. As the mother of three teenage sons, I have read a large number of children and young adult books and I believe that there is great value in a content review service. As much as we would love to read everything our children read, there just isn’t enough time. I also appreciate being able to select books for myself that are really worth my precious and limited reading time. I believe there is a book out there for everyone–they just have to find it!