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Dead -- Fiction. |
JUVENILE FICTION / Horror & Ghost Stories. |
JUVENILE FICTION / Fantasy & Magic. |
JUVENILE FICTION / Love & Romance. |
JUVENILE FICTION / Action & Adventure / General. |
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Summary
Summary
High school meets classic horror in Teen Frankenstein , Chandler Baker's modern reimagining of Mary Shelley's gothic novel .
It was a dark and stormy night when Tor Frankenstein accidentally hits someone with her car. And kills him. But, all is not lost--Tor, being the scientific genius she is, brings him back to life...
Thus begins a twisty, turn-y take on a familiar tale, set in the town of Hollow Pines, Texas, where high school is truly horrifying.
Author Notes
Chandler Baker grew up in Florida, went to college in Pennsylvania and studied law in Texas, where she now lives with her family and an ever-growing pile of books. Although she loves spinning tales with a touch of horror, she is a much bigger scaredy-cat than her stories would lead you to believe. In addition to the High School Horror series, Chandler is the author of the young adult novel, Alive .
Reviews (3)
School Library Journal Review
Gr 8 Up-In this trilogy opener, Baker takes the essence of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein; throws in heaps of high school drama; mystery, and murder; and then sets it in the small town of Hollow Pines, TX. The protagonist, Victoria "Tor" Frankenstein, could win a Nobel Prize, if only she could tell people how she brought a cute guy back from the dead. Tor and her best friend, Owen, are outcasts among the football-crazed students, until they show up at high school with her creation, Adam, who wins the hearts of the cheerleaders and the respect of his fellow football teammates-all in the name of scientific research. Then the bodies start to pile up. In a detached, scientific tone, Baker provides gruesome details of the multiple murders and Tor's continuous reanimation process to keep Adam alive. The pacing lags at times under the elaborate play-by-play of events, but the mystery surrounding Adam, and who he really is, propels the story forward. Teens might guess the identity of the killer early on, but they'll keep reading to learn the shocking reason behind the murders. Baker manages to weave all the horrifying events into a grotesque but fitting conclusion. VERDICT A serviceable addition for fans wanting a new series that blends equal parts horror and science fiction.-Karen Ginman, BookOps: The New York Public Library and Brooklyn Public Library © Copyright 2015. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Publisher's Weekly Review
Shelley's classic gets a modern makeover in this first book in the High School Horror series. Seventeen-year-old Victoria "Tor" Frankenstein is a science whiz who, along with her best friend Owen, is researching how to revive the dead through electricity. When Tor accidentally hits a teenager with her car and kills him, she seizes the opportunity to put her theories into practice. After succeeding, she names her amnesiac subject Adam and enrolls him at her school to help him assimilate and learn. But Adam's resurrection leads to social and romantic complications, his condition requires increasingly intensive upkeep, and his unknown past may be linked to a series of gruesome murders around town. While Baker (Alive) draws on the raw material of Shelley's Frankenstein for inspiration, she deviates considerably from the original plotline and themes-far from a reviled outcast, Adam manifests as a swoon-worthy football star, one even Tor finds hard to resist. Tor's moral bankruptcy outstrips even that of her namesake, making for a bleak, grisly story with a healthy dose of atmospheric horror. Ages 12-up. (Jan.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Booklist Review
Tor Frankenstein wants a Nobel Prize. Sure, even Marie Curie didn't have one at 17, but that's all the more reason why Tor wants one, and she knows she has what it takes. And, true to her name, she wants to win it by reanimating the dead rats and lizards for now. But when she accidentally hits and kills a teenage boy with her car, her first instinct is to continue her experiments on him. When he revives, she does what any mad-scientist wannabe would do: names him Adam and takes him to school with her. Murder comes into play, too, elevating this from simple science fiction to full-on horror. Tor's story is interspersed with her lab notes, first about reanimated rats, then Adam, giving this a creepy, methodical feel. First in the proposed High School Horror trilogy, this offers some scares as well as a strangely compelling protagonist. Recommend to fans of Shelley's original and teens ready for more intrigue than R. L. Stine's Fear Street series has to offer.--Comfort, Stacey Copyright 2015 Booklist