***Received from a Goodreads Giveaway***
Danielle: Chronicles of a Superheroine is a story of a precocious child who accomplishes more before age 10 than most people do their entire lives. The story, told in first-person by Danielle's older sister Claire, begins before Danielle is born and ends when Danielle turns twenty-two, is president of the USA, and she gets married on the White House lawn. This makes it sound like a happily-ever-after style fairytale, but to the author's credit, he is not saying that a woman's aspirations are through once she marries, it is just another step that she can choose to do or not and still run a country or do whatever she wants to do in life. (In addition, some villain nukes Ohio on her wedding day and so the story continues on in some form.) Danielle is meant to be an inspirational character to women and girls to change the world for the better. She’s an idealist figure that few, if any, can live up to with maybe the exception of Martine Rothblatt. Rothblatt was one of the more interesting additions to the companion book, also a personal friend of the author who makes appearances in the book as Danielle’s mentor (Rothblatt is a real superheroine). Kurzweil doesn’t expect anyone to live up to Danielle only to be inspired to try.
The writing is rather plain and simple, aimed at a younger audience, but the length of the novel is more than what would keep the attention of said audience at 250+ pages, with the additional pages of How You Can Be a Danielle attached making for a total of 460+ pages (not including the companion book). I found it boring at times and started skimming it pretty early on.
The companion book, A Chronicle of Ideas: A Guide for Superheroines (and Superheroes) is a 400+ page door-stopper. Kurzweil would have served his readers better and played better into his worldview of a future cyberconsciousness if he’d created an interactive app or website that did the same thing and in a better and entertaining way. It’s also awkward trying to read the main book and refer to the companion book when needed. Some entries are interesting but most are glorified footnotes akin to encyclopedia entries with some small asides to Danielle’s story. I understand an app would have cost money, but a very simple one could not have been more than the printing, etc. fees.
Overall, I get what Kurzweil was trying to do and it is an admirable endeavor but it could have used a few tweaks. For example: 1) Danielle has some flaws but they are minor and superficial so it makes it hard to connect with the character. 2) The book is aimed at a young audience and/or their caregivers/teachers and it is too long for them. It should have been broken down into several smaller books. More of a collection of Danielle's Adventures with each volume having Danielle and Claire confronted by a dilemma /task/world problem and finding a solution then having a section about what we can do in the real world to help and a section with an exercise on something small that we can do right now as a class/group/individual activity. 3) I like the area on How You Can Be a Danielle with links on where to start on different topics Danielle works on from starting your own business to fighting various world problems. But, I do wish it wasn't just examples and links to other sites to get you started but also had exercises or something from the author on a small step we can do now around your home, classroom, or in the surrounding community (a little kickstart to thinking and doing).
Ray Kurzweil is a superhero in real life, too. He's an inventor, writer, thinker, doer, Grammy Award winner (<--Yup, you read that right!), scientist, etc. He believes we can do great things in this world and make it a better place. He wrote this book and it's companion books to inspire others to go out into the world and make it better. A great ambition and one I wholly support. The book, though, has some issues and could use some rethinking.