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Miramax (Paperback)
ISBN-10: 1-4231-0029-8 (1423100298)
ISBN-13: 978-1-4231-0029-4 (9781423100294)
Publication Date: March 2007
List Price: $7.99
Review: A modern
day pirate robbing expensive yachts -- thirteen year old young James
Bond stumbles into this heist while on a school trip. Blood Fever is about James
Bond’s marvelous adventures as he attempts to solve this mystery.
This story will keep you at the edge of your seat and has a shocking
ending. Blood Fever is the
second in a series of five stories with young James Bonds solving the
crimes.
Blood Fever takes place
in England as well as in Sardinia. Sardinia is a city in Italy, on an
island in the Mediterranean Sea. In the very beginning of the book
before James Bond comes into the picture, a pirate that goes by the
name of Zoltan the Magyar, was given orders to rob a boat called The
Siren owned by Sir Cahill Goodenough. Zoltan wanted to take a bronze
statue of a Siren from the boat to give to his employer Count Ugo
Cornifex. Amy Goodenough who was swimming in the Mediterranean Sea at
the time, came onto the boat and stabbed Zoltan in the right shoulder
making his right arm useless. Because of this Zoltan killed everyone on
the boat except Amy who was taken hostage, and he sunk The Siren. Young
James Bond heard about the disaster from Mark Goodenough James
Bond’s friend and Cahill Goodenough’s son. James sees one
of his teachers acting strange and investigates. Will James be able to
solve the crime in time? Will Amy be rescued? Will Zoltan live long
enough to deliver the Siren statue that he stole from The Siren?
As the second book in the series, I thought that the book took right
off from where the first book Silverfin
left off. I was able to figure out who most of the criminals were very
early in the book. However, there were two I was wrong about. One
person I originally thought was the bad guy, but it was really the
other person. James was very well liked by everyone, even Zoltan who
befriended him. James met Zoltan while he was investigating why the
teachers were acting bizarre. I would rate this book four and a half
out of five stars because in the book the line “the name’s
Bond, James Bond” was used a little too often, and it got kind of
annoying. Other than that I thought the book was perfectly written and
the book made me feel like I was actually James Bond.
This book has unfortunately not received any awards.
Review written by
Andrew, Age 14, Grade 8. Date of review: July 2009.
All student book
reviews are protected by copyright and may not be reproduced in any
manner, print or electronic, without the express written consent of the
copyright owner. Reviews are published here with permission of the
copyright owner.
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