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The Atomic Weight of Secrets or The Arrival of the Mysterious Men in Black

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

In 1903, five truly brilliant young inventors, the children of the world's most important scientists, went about their lives and their work as they always had. But all that changed the day the men in black arrived.

They arrived to take twelve-year-old Jasper Modest and his six-year-old sister, Lucy—he with his remarkable creations and she with her perfect memory—from their London, England home to a place across the ocean they'd never seen before.

They arrived to take nine-year-old Wallace Banneker, last in a long line of Africa-descended scientists, from his chemistry, his father, and his New York home to a life he'd never imagined.

Twelve-year-old Noah Canto-Sagas, already missing his world-famous and beloved mother, was taken from Toronto, Canada, carrying only his clothes, his violin, and his remarkable mind.

And thirteen-year-old Faye Vigyanveta, the genius daughter of India's wealthiest and most accomplished scientists, was removed by force from her life of luxury.

From all across the world, they've been taken to mysterious Sole Manner Farm, and a beautiful but isolated schoolhouse in Dayton, Ohio, without a word from their parents as to why. Not even the wonderful schoolteacher they find there, Miss Brett, can explain it. She can give them love and care, but she can't give them answers.

Things only get stranger from there. What is the book with no pages Jasper and Lucy find in their mother's underwear drawer, and why do the men in black want it so badly?

How is it all the children have been taught the same bizarre poem—and yet no other rhymes or stories their entire lives?

And why haven't their parents tried to contact them?

Whatever the reasons, to brash, impetuous Faye, the situation is clear: They and their parents have been kidnapped by these terrible men in black, and the only way they're going to escape and rescue their parents is by completing the invention they didn't even know they were all working on—an invention that will change the world forever.

But what if the men in black aren't trying to harm the children? What if they're trying to protect them?

And if they're trying to protect them—from what?

An amazing story about the wonders of science and the still greater wonders of friendship, The Atomic Weight of Secrets or the Arrival of the Mysterious Men in Black, the first book of the Young Inventors Guild trilogy, is a truly original novel. Young readers will forever treasure Eden Unger Bowditch's funny, inventive, poignant, and wonderfully fun fiction debut.

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    • School Library Journal

      June 1, 2011
      Gr 5–7—-ive brilliant children from different countries are brought together under mysterious circumstances in 1903 and establish, or perhaps reestablish, the Young Inventor's Guild. Each family was visited by men dressed in outlandish black costumes before being taken to Dayton, OH, where the youngsters are assigned homes tended by loving nannies (who provide amazing food tantalizingly described) and go to school. For the first time, they are among intellectual peers and would be content to conduct their scientific experiments, if not for worrying about their parents, who were abruptly taken from them by the men in black. Did the men kidnap the adults or are they protecting the children while their parents do important research? Do their parents need rescue or are they busy with their scientific careers? The uncertainty the children feel will resonate with readers who feel overlooked by busy parents. Each child's history is explored in an individual chapter in which small details like a nursery rhyme in common or special tokens are discovered and are clearly part of a larger story arc minimally explored in this book. Partially convinced that they must rescue their parents, they invent and build the first airplane as a means of escaping (but due to their dangerous circumstances they give the prototype and plans to the Wright brothers). The men in black are more frustrating than frightening, and it is not until a more menacing villain appears in the final pages that any tension appears in the plotline.—"Caroline Tesauro, Radford Public Library, VA"

      Copyright 2011 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:5.5
  • Interest Level:4-8(MG)
  • Text Difficulty:4

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