The Eyes of the Killer Robot

by John Bellairs

Johnny Dixon (5)

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Thirteen-year-old Johnny Dixon is put in jeopardy when he and Professor Childermass try to find a robot made many years ago by an evil wizard.

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8 reviews
New England through a different lens. I don't know if whether reading these books would have made me more willing or more resistant to moving to Massachusetts. The baseball games, bad; the leaves good; the killer robot, endearing. The Gorey cover, which I'm certain I remember from my youth, certainly helps.
½
I was looking in a bookstore for one of my favorite childhood books -- The House with a Clock in its Walls -- since I can't remember anything about it anymore, even after hundreds of readings in my youth. Instead, I found another of John Bellairs' titles. This one turned out to be a supernatural "mystery" (although it's not one the reader is meant to solve with the main character). It's set in what seems like a very ancient time, when teenaged boys would hang out with older men, even going on unsupervised weekend trips with them! Like many YA books, the ending wraps up rather neatly even though the supernatural part isn't explained away. I had grown out of Bellairs' main audience (~9-13) before he wrote this book, but I suspect had I show more been that age I wouldn't have found as many faults as I now see as an adult.

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LT Haiku:

Teen has to protect
his eyes else killer robot
will find use for them.
show less
Mix together baseball, black magic, evil robots, and a creepy lunatic out for revenge, and you get The Eyes of the Killer Robot, a Professor Childermass/Johnny Dixon mystery. This story is not as much of a mystery as other books in the series, taking on more of the character of a gothic horror story complete with scary ghosts and evil villains.

The story starts at a Red Sox baseball game attended by Johnny and the Professor. The Professor, being a die-hard Sox fan harangues the Yankee players mercilessly. On the way home, the Professor tells Johnny about Johnny's grandfather's own baseball exploits when he was a young man, and relates the story of Evaristus Sloane and his mechanical baseball pitcher. The Professor explains how Johnny's show more grandfather prevented his team from purchasing the machine in 1900 (and how Evistarius vowed revenge), and the story of the mysterious pitcher who showed up out of nowhere at a baseball challenge to blow away the best hitter in the league. The Professor, of course, suspects that the mysterious pitcher was none other than Evistarius' mechanical pitcher.

Later, while relating the story on the same field to his friend Fergie, Johnny discovers an antique snuff box with an old pawn ticket inside. After consulting with the Professor, they take the ticket to the pawn shop and find themselves in possession of an ornate sword cane. Although they come to the conclusion that someone meant for them to have it, they have no idea why.

The Professor becomes interested in Evistarius' robot. Assuming the nutty inventor must be dead (since it is 50 years since anyone saw him), the Professor takes the boys to find the old man's house and try to find the robot. They recover the robot, or at least its parts, in short order, but it is lacking eyes. Happily, they stumble across a small box holding what appear to be glass eyes for the robot alongside the road. Taking the robot with them, they return to Duston Heights so that the Professor can reassemble the machine.

Meanwhile, Johnny has been noticing some odd events - a strange blue car has been showing up wherever he is, and he has been visited by what appears to be a ghost. Things come to a head when the Professor finally finishes assembling the robot and installs the glass eyes - whereupon the robot vanishes as soon as it is left alone.

After mysterious happenings that the Professor attributes to the runaway robot, he, Johnny and Fergie all return to Sloane's house, but are sidetracked. Johnny is kidnapped by Sloane and saved in the nick of time (by an unusual rescuer). Things seem to be back to normal, but in classic horror-movie fashion, the evil villain returns for a final act of revenge that is only averted at the last minute (the sword cane, unsurprisingly, comes in handy).

Unlike some of the other Johnny Dixon mysteries where the puzzle of the story forms the core of the book, in The Eyes of the Killer Robot there is only a limited amount of mystery, and most puzzles are solved pretty quickly after they are introduced in the story. Unusual for a Bellairs book, neither Johnny nor Fergie find themselves in trouble as a result of running off half-cocked without telling the Professor vital information. Rather, Johnny gets into trouble because of missteps by the Professor (and his grandparents). Contrary to most of the books in the series, both Johnny and Fergie are oddly level-headed.

Despite the lack of a strong mystery element, the scary gothic horror parts of the book are quite well done, and give the entire story an appropriately spooky and creepy feeling, despite the fact that the story revolves around a baseball pitching robot and the madman that built it. Bellairs plays upon some fears that are basic to kids - the fear of being kidnapped, the fear of losing one's sight, and the fear of being betrayed by adults in authority. A better mystery would have improved the book, but the scary elements save it. Overall, this is a decent, if unspectacular installment in the Johnny Dixon series.

This review has been posted on my blog Dreaming About Other Worlds.
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½
I wouldn't describe anything that Bellairs wrote as bad, but this book certainly features one of his more bizarre plots. An evil magician builds a magical, baseball-playing robot and schemes to take revenge against Johnny's grandfather for not endorsing it? Okay .... Despite the strange premise, the story actually strikes me as a bit dull compared to some others in the series. However, the unusual, horrific twist of the robot's eyes themselves add a bit of spice to the mixture.
½
I enjoy Bellairs' books. His characters are entertaining and the adventures keep me reading. He is able to keep the action going to make me want to read the next chapter and the next.

The story of a robot that pitches and the idea that it comes to life is a fun premise.
While looking through the window, Johnny Dixon sees that insane Evaristus Sloane's creation of a baseball-pitching robot is almost complete, except for its missing eyes, and when Johnny feels he is being followed, he becomes rather nervous.
Reread. Not one of my favorite Johnny Dixon books, but I wanted to read something about baseball.
½

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Author Information

Picture of author.
37+ Works 12,601 Members
John Bellairs was born in Marshall, Michigan on January 17, 1938. He attended Notre Dame and the University of Chicago. Prior to becoming a full-time writer, he was a teacher. He went on to author fifteen graphic novels for young adults, one fantasy book "The Face in the Frost," and two other books. His works have been nominated for several awards show more in the past. Among those nominated for, he won the Utah Children's Fiction Book Award in 1981 for "The Letter, the Witch and the Ring" and the New York Times Outstanding Books of 1973 Award for "The House with a Clock in Its Walls." Bellairs died of cardiovascular disease, on March 8, 1991. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Some Editions

Gorey, Edward (Illustrator)

Awards and Honors

Series

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The Eyes of the Killer Robot
Original publication date
1986-10
People/Characters
Johnny Dixon; Roderick Childermass; Byron "Fergie" Ferguson; Henry "Grampa" Dixon; Kate "Gramma" Dixon; Evaristus Sloane (show all 10); Amalia Pimlico; Father Thomas Higgins; Cliff Bullard; Charles Coote
Important places
Duston Heights, Massachusetts, USA; Stark Corners, New Hampshire, USA; Fenway Park, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
First words
"Go foul, you dirty dog!"
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)It was a good sound, and Johnny was glad to join in.

Classifications

Genre
Fiction and Literature
DDC/MDS
741.5973Arts & recreationDrawing & decorative artsDrawing and drawingsComic books, graphic novels, fotonovelas, cartoons, caricatures, comic stripsHistory, geographic treatment, biographyNorth AmericanUnited States (General)
LCC
PZ7 .B413 .ELanguage and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresJuvenile belles lettres
BISAC

Statistics

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378
Popularity
82,426
Reviews
8
Rating
½ (3.72)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
17
ASINs
8