![]() What Ryan and Regan accomplish is because they’re the smart kids of smart parents, not out of any short-comings of the adults. ![]() It was refreshing to see the adults depicted as adults and not idiots or mean-spirited. The sibling dynamic is definitely well-done. They tease each other, but never cruelly, and it is evident that they truly love each other. Ryan is older and thus underestimates his sister sometimes. Ryan and Regan are a cute brother/sister pair. ![]() I also tried to hearken back to what I would have enjoyed at the age of eight or nine. I don’t usually read below the YA level anymore unless I’m reading to my four year old nephew, but I am a librarian, so I put my librarian cap on for this book. ![]() I don’t think I realized when I entered the giveaway for this (a really long time ago, sorry about that, Richards!) that it’s a middle grade/children’s series. But when they accidentally overhear their parents talking, they realize there may be more to Proact than meets the eye, and they’re determined to find out! Ryan and Regan can’t believe their scientist parents made them move from San Diego to the total snoozefest of Pennsylvania practically overnight just so they can work at a boring science corporation, Proact. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |