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Rodman Philbrick

Author of Freak the Mighty

55+ Works 15,815 Members 363 Reviews 4 Favorited

About the Author

Rodman Philbrick is an outstanding author who has won the prestigious American Library Association Best Book for Young Adults and Quick Pick Awards. Freak the Mighty has been made into a Hollywood film. Author location: USA

Series

Works by Rodman Philbrick

Freak the Mighty (1993) 5,891 copies, 154 reviews
The Mostly True Adventures of Homer P. Figg (2009) 2,388 copies, 59 reviews
The Last Book in the Universe (2000) 1,669 copies, 81 reviews
The Young Man And The Sea (2004) 1,038 copies, 11 reviews
Zane and the Hurricane: A Story of Katrina (2014) 818 copies, 19 reviews
Wildfire: A Novel (2019) 817 copies, 9 reviews
Max The Mighty (1998) 728 copies, 8 reviews
The Fire Pony (1996) 354 copies, 3 reviews
Wild River (2021) 270 copies, 3 reviews
The Big Dark (2016) 162 copies, 6 reviews
REM World (2000) 148 copies, 1 review
Visitors: Strange Invaders (1997) 106 copies
Wild Wave (The Wild Series) (2024) 71 copies
Coffins (2002) 65 copies
We Own the Sky (2022) 46 copies
Abduction (1998) 46 copies
Things (Visitors, Book II) (1997) 42 copies
Ice for the Eskimo (1986) 13 copies
The Big Chip (Tempus) (1990) 9 copies
Shadows Kills (1985) 7 copies
Brothers & Sinners (1993) 6 copies
Crystal Blue Persuasion (1988) 4 copies
Walk on the Water (1991) 3 copies
Dark Matter (2000) 2 copies
Slow Dancer (1984) 1 copy
Hunger (2012) 1 copy
Deli Nehir (2023) 1 copy
Nine Levels Down (2012) 1 copy
Shadow Kills 1 copy

Associated Works

The Ultimate Dracula (1991) — Contributor — 536 copies, 2 reviews
Raymond Chandler's Philip Marlowe (1988) — Contributor, some editions — 223 copies, 6 reviews
Tomorrowland: 10 Stories About the Future (1999) — Contributor — 132 copies, 3 reviews
Dracula: Prince of Darkness (1992) — Contributor — 79 copies, 1 review
The Black Moon (1989) — Contributor — 28 copies
Justice for Hire (1990) — Contributor — 13 copies

Tagged

adventure (280) brothers (48) bullying (107) chapter book (110) children (54) children's (89) children's literature (41) Civil War (176) death (93) disabilities (102) disability (46) dystopia (54) family (91) fantasy (58) fiction (561) friendship (294) historical fiction (335) humor (82) juvenile (48) juvenile fiction (47) Maine (51) Newbery Honor (78) orphans (41) read (46) realistic fiction (220) science fiction (221) survival (107) to-read (155) YA (136) young adult (172)

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

382 reviews
While this review indicates a 2019 read date, I have read it every year since then.

I read this over and over in middle school. Freak and I had so much in common! Not the same condition, though. I was a sick kid who is now a sick adult, but thanks to Disability Twitter and Disability YouTube, I have a community. I didn't before, so I lived vicariously through Freak, or tried. When I read this again today as an adult, I thought I'd pick up on things differently. Not really. The book is show more accessible to both kids and adults, which feels kind of rare. I admire the author for this. The movie adaptation is really faithful and it was so great to see the book come to life. The author's fine with it, even. I watched some of his videos on YouTube. The book warmed my heart, made me laugh, gave me hope, made me nervous and scared, then broke my heart. I remembered everything that happened but oh, I was still so sad. As an adult, I realized something I hadn't as a kid: Freak knew. He knew the whole time, and he made up an elaborate story to cope. I have so many feelings. I'm so glad this book was written, that I read it as a kid, and now. show less
Excellent Katrina story. Quick read with short chapters and a fast paced plot -- really enjoyed it. I think what I enjoyed the most was the portrayal of New Orleans' culture through the people that Zane interacts with. You get this incredible sense of community and history and the importance of family through Miss Trissy and Tru and Malvina, None of them have easy stories, or lives without struggle, but they are an amazing example of endurance in a hard life -- and I love the beautiful show more moments that they have too -- Miss Trissy singing in church, Tru playing in the Processions, Malvina cracking endless jokes and dancing in the second line. Vivid, lovely and caring.

Now, the hard stuff, because oh yeah, this is a hard read --the description of storm and the floodwaters rising, snakes in the water, the lack of help on the ground, the terrifying armed response of the white police trying to prevent people coming into safe neighborhoods, the floating bodies and the filth and smell at the superdome. Gun violence, violence against pets, frightening experiences with a drug dealer -- there's a lot in here. In part, that's what makes it such a great read, but as an adult it just makes the horror of how badly the US failed New Orleans the more heartbreaking.

I've seen the reviews that are frustrated with the swift wrap-up/ending, but I think weirder things happen in the unreality of disaster, and given how the story was going, it worked ok for me.
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Bellissimo questo libro perchè fa non solo volare la fantasia, ma la fa anche lavorare. Spesso ho pensato a chi avrà il merito, la fortuna, la sfortuna, il piacere o la disavventura di scrivere l'ultimo libro prima della fine dell'universo. Pensate a cosa potrà contenere un libro del genere: la somma di tutti i libri scritti? La sintesi di tutte le idee espresse dagli uomini nei millenni? Un pensiero unico? Un'idea trans-umana? Un testo fatto di tante pagine bianche leggibili solo da chi show more ne conosce la lingua? E quale sarà quella lingua?

In un mondo devastato, in cui secoli prima un cataclisma ha distrutto gli equilibri e le risorse del pianeta, la vita e ridotta a pura sopravvivenza. Le città sono divise in territori, contesi e difesi da bande armate, territori che nessuno può attraversare senza permesso, pena la morte. Nessuno più ricorda, nessuno più e in grado di leggere, non esiste niente di più prezioso di una sorta di sonda cerebrale in grado di riprodurre immagini direttamente nel cervello. A Spas è negata anche quell'effimera evasione. È nato "difettoso", soggetto a spasmi epilettici che hanno causato la sua cacciata dalla famiglia adottiva con cui viveva; tollerato a malapena dalla banda del potente Billy Bizmo, deve ripagare la generosità del capo con qualche lavoro sporco. Come per esempio picchiare e derubare il vecchio Tore, che non sembra avere niente di prezioso con sé, tranne una scatola in cui custodisce tanti fogli di carta che chiama "libro". Contrariamente agli ordini, Spas aiuta il vecchio, da cui e affascinato; e quando viene a sapere che la sua amata sorella Bean è malata terminale, è proprio a lui che si rivolge per osare l'impensabile: passare da una zona all'altra, da clandestini, per raggiungere Bean e aiutarla. Ma l'impresa è folle, e non basta il coraggio per compierla...

Rodman Philbrick, pluripremiato autore americano di fantascienza, ha scritto una fiaba noir dai toni apocalittici ambientata in un mondo alternativo e grottesco. L'ultimo libro dell'universo raffigura il nostro pianeta sotto il giogo del Caos, alla mercé di poche bellicose fazioni che si spartiscono il potere. Una catastrofe immane aveva prodotto intensi rivolgimenti, distruggendo in un sol colpo società e culture millenarie. I ricordi e le tradizioni si indeboliscono, il presente si confonde con il mito, mentre i libri scompaiono dalla faccia delle terra senza troppi rimpianti. Finché il giovane Spas, protagonista e voce narrante, non s'imbatte in un cumulo di fogli di carta di dubbia utilità e dal nome esotico di ”Libro“. Presagi?
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While this 2010 Newbery honor winner isn't up to par with some other Newbery books, I did enjoy this tale and it was worth the read.

Set in the time of the American Civil War, Homer and his brother are orphans living in Maine with their near do well Uncle.

Sleeping in a barn surrounded by animals, with little to eat, their Uncle berates them and reminds them of the burden they are. When he can make money by selling Harold, Uncle Squint gladly hands him to the US government to fight in the show more Civil War.

Homer runs away to find Harold, and we follow him as he has great adventures helping the underground railroad hide slaves bound for Canada, riding high in the sky in a silk hot air balloon, and joining a side show traveling with the medicine man.

Within the first sentences of the book, Homer lets the reader know that "telling the truth don't come easy to me." Thus, one never knows if Homer's adventures are true or fabricated.

Creatively written, the book is captivating both for the humor contained in Homer's descriptions contrasted with the serious and realistic depiction of the Gettysburg, Pennsylvania battlefield.
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Statistics

Works
55
Also by
6
Members
15,815
Popularity
#1,436
Rating
3.8
Reviews
363
ISBNs
319
Languages
9
Favorited
4

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