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Annie and the Aliens

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It's the summer holiday and Annie needs someone to play with her—she's fed up at being excluded from the games of her brothers. When Annie discovers that the boys are keeping a secret from her, she's determined to uncover it. After a quick bit of investigation, and a handy hint from Dad, Annie finds out that the boys are looking for UFOs, and she comes up with a plan.

80 pages, Paperback

First published June 21, 2001

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Emily Smith

1,892 books53 followers

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Profile Image for Pam Glazier.
66 reviews20 followers
March 9, 2018
Well, this book is a bit sexist, and seems to hate fat people. but other than that, I guess it's ok. Annie is mad that the new houseguest has talked her brothers into excluding her from their secret club. so she spends the first half of the book wondering what they're doing, sneaking around trying to figure it out, and complaining to her parents about it. She blames Arthur, the new houseguest, who the author has decided to characterize as smug and overweight. SPOILERS AHEAD... eventually, Annie learns the boys' secret and makes plans to protect them. When that backfires, she bests Arthur at his own game by playing around unsupervised with various household objects including silver paint. She is victorious, and so the story ends with her forcing all the boys to play teaparty as if it's a punishment.

There are some scenes that are decent. I like the eventual cameraderie that Annie has with her brothers. And the parents seem to be supportive and kind with Annie feeling unquestioningly open and trusting toward them, which is bland but also indicative of a strong family bond. It was also nice to see Annie's mom changing fuses and solving little confusions.

In the end, this is an easy-to-read book for a reader who is just starting to get into reading paragraphs. the story flows well, and is repetitive and basic enough to avoid confusion, with a few challenging words and spellings to keep the reader on their toes. This book is fine to give to your child as something new to read so long as you aren't horrified by the old-school gender role stuff, the unsupervised tool/paint playing, or the cliched "fat people are bad" message.

As a last little note, I was pretty surprised to learn that this was copyrighted in 2001 by Random House. What are their editors even doing over there?
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