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Chocolate or vanilla? Ok, so I'm not in
the habit of reviewing books for children but this one is ingenious. Jason
Shiga majored in mathematics at the University of California and his interest
in puzzles, games and those choose-your-own-adventure books that I remember
loving as a child, have helped him to create a genuinely unique innovation
in graphic novels. The graphic panels are linked by tubes, following these with your finger to the tabs on the edge of each page leads you to flicking back and forth through the book as you follow the path designated by the choices you make. Along the way there are codes required to help you progress and plenty of times where the wrong decision results in the destruction of the entire human race. Shiga also manages to work in theories of time travel, entropy and multiple universes in a way that is digestible for children and even rather fun. The front cover claims that there are 3,856 story possibilities but most of those are different by only a panel or two. In reality it seems that there are at least 20 different ways the story might pan out and its the kind of book that I can imagine would amuse a child for hours as they make they way back and forth, beginning again after they find themselves at a dead end, literally. I remember the temptation to cheat with the CYOA books I read as a child, that's why Shiga has put the codes in here, he wants to make sure the book, like modern computer games, has as long a playability as possible. To give you an idea of the complexity of his task above is a photo of the man himself in front of his original black and white schematic for the book. If you're a bit geeky or you have children aged between about ten and the early teens then this book would be a great gift. The pages are thick and glossily laminated to help its durability with all that page-turning and whilst I'm sure there'll come a time when its novelty wears off they, or you, will have travelled through time frequently enough to have made it more than worth your while. William
Rycroft
To read more of William Rycroft's book reviews, check out his blog at Just William's Luck.
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