Sputnik’s Guide to Life on Earth

Sputnik’s Guide to Life on Earth by Frank Cottrell Boyce

Book of the Week: 20 January 2019

Illustrated by Steve Lenton

This week’s choice is a book you may have missed from 2016 when it was shortlisted for the Carnegie Medal.

Aliens are often depicted as spindly beings who wish to be taken to your leader, or tentacled monstrosities who want to take over the planet. They don’t often come disguised as dogs. Sputnik wears a kilt and goggles and is about the same height as Prez, who is the only one able to see him in this form. Everyone else, including the Blythe family who are looking after Prez, sees him as a different breed of dog. Prez is apparently the reason why Sputnik is visiting Earth. The planet is in danger of destruction and Prez must come up with ten things worth seeing or doing in order to prove the whole place isn’t worthless and deserving of obliteration. Sputnik mostly communicates through telepathy with Prez and by doggy handshakes with everyone else. Despite being worried about his Grandfather who can’t look after him like he normally does, Prez has no choice but to follow Sputnik’s instructions and limit the fallout from Sputnik’s exuberance. There is the memorable time that he gives five year old Annabel a working light sabre at her fifth birthday party and she manages to cut off her friends’ hair and fell a tree.

This is a funny and endearing story that, along with wild adventures and wisecracks, has a touching message about families and a sense of belonging.

Other stories that feature aliens:

The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams has a lot in common with Sputnik’s Guide to Life on Earth. Ford Prefect is an alien who is trying to save his friend Arthur Dent before Earth is destroyed to make way for a hyper-space bypass.

The War of the Worlds by H.G. Wells – Earthlings are terrorised by an alien invasion from Mars.

The Day of the Triffids by John Wyndham – Flesh-eating plants are free to dominate Earth after most people have been blinded by a meteor shower.

Landscape with Invisible Hand by M.T. Anderson – More satire than science fiction.

The Chaos Walking series by Patrick Ness – Human beings are the alien invaders of a planet inhabited by the Spackle.

The Fifth Wave by Rick Yancey – Alien beings disguise themselves as humans hunting down the few survivors left on Earth.

I Am Number Four by Pittacus Lore – A tiny number of alien visitors try to blend in and re-group on Earth but other powers are out to get them.

All the above are in stock in the School Library.

See You in the Cosmos

See You in the Cosmos by Jack Cheng

Book of the Week: 24 September 2017

Alex is mad about all things space-related, particularly rockets. He has even called his dog Carl Sagan in honour of his astrophysicist hero. Being an independent type, Alex sets out with Carl Sagan, his home-built rocket Voyager 3 and his Golden i-Pod to a launch event in the desert called the Southwest High-Altitude Rocket Festival or SHARF (Alex is a big fan of acronyms). He feels he already knows many of the participants from his hours spent online on Rocketforum, a social media site for amateur rocket enthusiasts. He leaves his mum some pre-prepared meals and catches a train to New Mexico. We gather that his mother has ‘quiet days’, doesn’t seem to mind what he does and takes a lot of long walks but, for now, not much more is explained. Alex’s father died when he was young and his brother, Ronnie, is a sports agent in Los Angeles, so along with Carl Sagan, he is a free agent. The unfolding story turns out to be not so much about astronomy and rockets, as a journey about finding out who you really are. Alex encounters a varied cast of characters on his road trip and he describes them vividly in his audio-diaries. He is creating a series of podcasts about his life on Earth which he intends launching into space on his Golden i-Pod. Lots of incidents are therefore conveyed in dialogue and ‘stage directions’.

This is a warm-hearted book and Alex is an engaging character. If you enjoy books like Smart by Kim Slater or Wonder by R.J. Palacio, then See You in the Cosmos is definitely one to try. You can read an extract here.

 

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