spy adventure tagged posts

Review: Agent Colt Shore Domino 29 by Axel Avian

AvianDomino29Agent Colt Shore: Domino 29buy it
by Axel Avian—his website
Recommended Ages: 13+

Aimee at Arundel Publishing kindly sent me a pre-release copy of this first book in what promises to be a cool series. I went into this eyes-wide-open, even though I feared it was going to be a rip-off of Anthony Horowitz’s Alex Rider series—both series featuring a type of teenage James Bond. I was also a little wary of it being as unreadably horrible as the last book I accepted from a little-known publisher and a first-time author. You won’t find my review of that book, because I didn’t write one. I only review books I feel that I can positively recommend. So the fact that you are reading this review means that I liked this book. In fact, I really, really liked it.

Colt Shore is like Alex Rider in about the same way that Percy Jackson is like Harry Potter...

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Review: Snakehead by Anthony Horowitz

HorowitzSnakeheadSnakeheadbuy it
by Anthony Horowitz—his website
Recommended Ages: 12+

Alex Rider, Britain’s leading fourteen-year-old spy—more or less James Bond with zits—has survived a lot in only a few fast-paced months. He has been gunned down by an assassin and lived to tell. He has blown up a luxury hotel in outer space. He has even survived a feature-film adaptation that flopped at the box office. And now, in his seventh action-filled adventure, Alex has splashed down in Australian waters and become a guest of ASIS, the down-under intelligence agency that wants him to do for them what he has so often done for Britain’s MI6 and, most recently, America’s CIA. What better cover could a spy ask for than to be a kid? In this case, it should be even easier than that. Alex only needs to look like a dirty, dentally-challenged Afghan refugee kid to lend credibility to the cover of the grown-up spy who is supposed to do the real job. All he has to do is keep his mouth shut and act stupid...

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