Showing posts with label Henderson's Boys. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Henderson's Boys. Show all posts

Sunday, 29 August 2010

Review: Shadow Wave - Robert Muchamore

After a tsunami causes massive devastation to a tropical island, its governor sends in the bulldozers to knock down villages, replacing them with luxury hotels. Guarding the corrupt governor's family isn't James Adams' idea of the perfect mission, especially as it's going to be his last as a CHERUB agent. And then retired colleague Kyle Blueman comes up with an unofficial and highly dangerous plan of his own. James must choose between loyalty to CHERUB, and loyalty to his oldest friend.


This is the twelfth and final book in the series. You can read a summary of what CHERUB is all about here. Hopefully one day I'll get round to rereading and reviewing the previous books.

James is seventeen now and it's only a matter of time before he retires as a CHERUB agent. This book takes on a slightly different format to the previous ones which mostly start out with a training exercise and then go onto the main mission. Shadow wave can generally be split into three parts. The first third starts off with James finishing up his previous mission with the Brigands Motorcycle Club before returning to the CHERUB campus. A lot of previous characters return for a reunion of sorts and James finds out from his best friend, Kyle, that the last mission he is set to go on isn't quite what it seems. This lead to a fairly long flashback section in the middle of the book - of a previous mission of Kyle's - that sets up the rest of the book. 


The main thing I noticed about this book was that a lot of it wasn't centred around James. There's so many great characters in these books so it was good to see sections from the point of view of some of the other characters. There were some I'd have liked to have seen more of but I guess there's only so much you can put in one book! I'd have really liked to have found out more about the epically long mission that Dante was on. It keeps being mentioned throughout this book and the previous one; it'd be awesome to actually read it though.

 There was also a sense of nostalgia about Shadow Wave, not only James feeling it because he'd be leaving campus soon but for the reader as well. James was around twelve-years-old when the series started so it feels like we've watched him grow up throughout the books. I liked how the author finished off the book (and the series). It was just the right amount of happy cheesiness without going overboard.

A great story and a great ending to an awesome series. I can't wait for Muchamore's next series and of course the next of the Henderson's Boys books!

Monday, 23 August 2010

Shadow Wave (Cherub) Preview and Squeeing!

I'm sooo excited for the soon to be released Shadow Wave, the latest (and hopefully not last) of the Cherub series. So, I thought I'd share the trailer and some other stuff with you.

First up, if you've not yet experienced these books, here's a summary of what they're about:

CHERUB is a division of MI5. The unusual thing about CHERUB is that all of it's agents are between the age of ten and seventeen because, well, who'd suspect a teenager of being a spy? CHERUB agents are all orphans and are trained in combat and espionage so they can infiltrate the lives of various criminals, terrorists and bad guys in general - often by befriending their children.

The books (twelve in total) mainly follow James Adams from his initial recruitment into Cherub following the death of his mother. There's also a great cast of other characters including James' sister, Lauren, his on-off girlfriend, Kerry, and my particular favourite, Dante. The thing I particularly like about the characters in the these books is that they're realistic. They drink, swear and bend the rules (the books come with a 'not suitable for younger readers' stamp). James flirts with any girl he meets despite having a girlfriend. James and Lauren argue all of the time but they're there for each other when it really matters.


The adventures in this series are fun and exciting, sometimes gritty and dangerous and again, the realism is there. These kids are well trained but they aren't superhuman. They make mistakes and get injured. Even the bad guys are normal in that they aren't evil villians who want to take over the world. There's crooks, drug dealers, eco-terrorists and gangsters to contend with and in Shadow Wave a corrupt governor.

Shadow Wave

After a tsunami causes massive devastation to a tropical island, its governor sends in the bulldozers to knock down villages, replacing them with luxury hotels.

Guarding the corrupt governor’s family isn’t James Adams’ idea of the perfect mission, especially as it’s going to be his last as a CHERUB agent. And then retired colleague Kyle Blueman comes up with an unofficial and highly dangerous plan of his own.

James must choose between loyalty to CHERUB, and loyalty to his oldest friend.


Read the opening chapter on the Cherub Campus website

Shadow Wave Trailer



Shadow Wave Preview with author Robert Muchamore



Find out more about Cherub and the Prequel series Henderson's Boys at cherubcampus.com

Follow Robert Muchamore on Twitter: @RobertMuchamore

Sunday, 21 February 2010

Review: Secret Army - Robert Muchamore


Secret Army (Henderson's Boys)Britain, 1941.

The government is building a secret army of intelligence agents to work undercover, gathering information and planning sabotage operations. Henderson's boys are part of that network: kids cut adrift by the war, training for the fight of their lives. They'll have to parachute into unknown territory, travel cross-country and outsmart a bunch of adults in a daredevil exercise.

In wartime Britain, anything goes.
A sign of a good book? Reading it straight through in an evening, pausing only to grab a drink or food. Well, that's what I did with this one because I literally couldn't put it down!

The Henderson's Boys series is pretty much a prequel to the CHERUB series. CHERUB is an organisation that was set up by Charles Henderson during World War II, training youngsters to become secret agents - because no one suspects a kid. The first two books have had Henderson, along with a handful of war orphans, scuppering the Nazi's plans to envade England. In Secret Army, they have now made it back to Britain and set up a training facility. Secret Army folllows the first lot of kids through their training and a final test which will enable them to be allowed to be dropped into occupied Europe on actual missions.

The characters in these books are pretty awesome. PT is my definite favourite - got to love the bad boy of the bunch! - but they're all very likeable in their own way. Charles Henderson himself is a great character, if only because he doesn't seem like the most obvious person to set up such an organisation.

Really great plot, combining the exciting adventure I've come to expect from this and the CHERUB books as well as loads of great detail about how the CHERUB organisation came to be.

www.hendersonsboys.com



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