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Sputnik's Guide to Life on Earth

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A one-of-a-kind story of heart, humor, and finding one's place in the universe.

Prez knows that the best way to keep track of things is to make a list. That's important when you have a grandfather who is constantly forgetting. And it's even more important when your grandfather can't care for you anymore and you have to go live with a foster family out in the country.
Prez is still learning to fit in at his new home when he answers the door to meet Sputnik—a kid who is more than a little strange. First, he can hear what Prez is thinking. Second, he looks like a dog to everyone except Prez. Third, he can manipulate the laws of space and time. Sputnik, it turns out is an alien, and he's got a mission that requires Prez's help: the Earth has been marked for destruction, and the only way they can stop it is to come up with ten reasons why the planet should be saved.

Thus begins one of the most fun and eventful summers of Prez's life, as he and Sputnik set out on a journey to compile the most important list Prez has ever made—and discover just what makes our world so remarkable.

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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 24, 2017
      Prez Mellows lives with his increasingly forgetful grandfather until an incident that results in Granddad being sent away to be “sorted out.” Prez, electively mute, is taken in by the Blythes, a raucous farm family on Scotland’s southern border. Though the premise sounds grim, Boyce’s (The Astounding Broccoli Boy) story is anything but, and it’s kick-started by the arrival of Sputnik, a being visible to Prez as a “wee alien in a kilt and goggles,” and to everyone else as an adorable and exceedingly clever dog. Sputnik’s mission is to save Earth from impending doom by finding 10 worthy things about the planet to update a guidebook, originally written by Laika, the Russian space dog. His advanced knowledge of scientific principles combines with a penchant for mischief to produce an avalanche of kooky mayhem (working lightsabers are involved). It’s a funny and touching story about a boy who, through a transformative summer, learns to expand his definitions of family and home. “Home’s not a building,” as Sputnik tells Prez. “Home is other people, isn’t it?” Ages 8–12.

    • School Library Journal

      Starred review from April 1, 2017
      Gr 4-7-Pre-z Mellows is a list expert. He's been making lists for years on sticky notes to help his granddad remember important life facts, such as -Prez is your grandson- and -Do not go out without trousers.- His lists help save the planet when a space-traveling alien, Sputnik, shows up on Earth and enlists Prez's help to come up with 10 reasons Earth should be spared; otherwise, it will be shrunk to oblivion. To Prez, Sputnik looks like a boy wearing a kilt, a leather helmet, and flying goggles, but to everyone else, he looks like a dog. Selectively mute, Prez is trying to come to grips with being in a -temporary- foster home with a raucous family, while mistakenly thinking his granddad was taken away to prison rather than a nursing home. Cottrell Boyce (Millions; The Astounding Broccoli Boy) invites readers to suspend belief while going on a physics-defying, mind-bending adventure that's sure to appeal to a wide audience. When a motorized scooter becomes a getaway vehicle, Prez and Sputnik try to help Granddad retrieve lost memories, establish reasons why Earth should be saved, and, along the way, discover where they really belong and what is most important. VERDICT Begging to be read aloud and full of escapades, humor, and spunk, this is a stand-alone gem. For all middle grade shelves.-Michele Shaw, Quail Run Elementary School, San Ramon, CA

      Copyright 2017 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from April 1, 2017
      A foster boy learns that home is always closer than he thinks.Ever since his increasingly senile granddad was taken away to "get sorted out," Prez Mellows has been living in Children's Temporary Accommodation. This summer, however, he's staying with the loving and rambunctious Blythe family on their farm. The structure and daily chores give Prez's life a sense of normalcy, but the arrival of a cigar-smoking, gravity-surfing extraterrestrial named Sputnik destabilizes Prez's new routine. According to Sputnik, everyone in the universe has a mission, and Sputnik's is to save Prez by saving Earth from Planetary Clearance. To do this, they must find 10 things that make Earth worth saving. Part of the book's hilarity lies in the fact that Sputnik appears as a dog to everyone except Prez, who sees a funny-looking kid in a kilt and aviator goggles. Fortunately, Sputnik can read Prez's mind, thus saving the boy from looking like he's holding lengthy conversations with a dog. From a destructive lightsaber incident at a 5-year-old's birthday party through a speed-of-light joy ride on a digger to Hadrian's Wall to a major jailbreak fail, belly laughs are central to the action. The overall themes of home, family, and one's place in the universe are reflected in moments of quiet sweetness. The narrative assumes a white default. A raucous adventure with a heart of gold. (Fantasy. 8-13)

      COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Narrator Peter Capaldi's Scottish accent is so strong that American listeners may have trouble understanding him at first, but those who stick with it are in for a supersonic treat. Prez Mellows has been removed from the care of his senile grandad and is living in a temporary foster home when a space-traveling alien--in the form of a dog named Sputnik--shows up at his door. Capaldi's exuberant performance gives Boyce's delightful writing even more cheerful buoyancy, humor, and heart as he captures jaunty Sputnik and his outlandish antics. Especially sympathetic as Prez, Capaldi modulates his voice from quiet wonder to panicked alarm amid the madcap physics-defying adventures. Heartwarming fun will entertain the whole family. S.C. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2019, Portland, Maine
    • Booklist

      Starred review from April 15, 2017
      Grades 3-6 *Starred Review* Prez keeps his bag packed, positive that his grandfather will pick him up from the Children's Temporary Accommodation at any moment. But until Granddad gets out of jail, Prez will be spending the summer at the Blythe family's farm. He has barely arrived when a peculiar individual sporting a kilt and flight goggles appears at the door: Sputnik Mellows. He, too, is welcomed by the Blythes, who are somehow under the impression that he is a doghandshakes all around! Still more curious, Sputnik can read Prez's thoughts, a useful skill when dealing with a voluntary mute like Prez. How is all this possible? Sputnik is an alien, and quite a charming one at that, and he needs Prez's help saving Earth from destruction. If, by the end of summer, the pair of them can come up with 10 things worth seeingfor an interplanetary guidebookthe planet will be saved. Boyce's (Cosmic, 2008) newest is by turns hilarious and earnest. Sputnik's zany energy and role as clueless tourist produce laugh-out-loud scenarios and turn everyday objects into things of wonderyou'll never look at a remote control the same way again. On the flip side, he helps Prez find his voice and come to terms with hard truths about his grandfather. A stellar exploration of the meaning of home and the earthly wonders all around us.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2017, American Library Association.)

    • The Horn Book

      July 1, 2017
      When narrator Prez Mellows, who is electively mute and living in temporary care until Granddad can get himself sorted out, opens the front door of his foster family's house, there stands a stranger wearing goggles, a too-big sweater, a leather helmet, and a kilt, with a massive pair of scissors stuffed in his belt like a sword. His name: Sputnik. To Prez, he looks like a boy; to everyone else, like a dog. But Prez soon learns that Sputnik is an alien who can read minds and play with the laws of physics. Sputnik is on a mission: he must find ten things worth seeing or doing in order to save Earth from destruction (the universe's Planetary Clearance department is in the midst of pan-galactic decluttering --getting rid of useless old planets and stars to make room for new celestial bodies). What follows is a madcap series of cinematic action sequences, and soon Sputnik has nine not-very-interesting things worth saving on his list: Earth's atmosphere, chickens and eggs, the TV remote, etc. But it's with the tenth thing, revealed at the end, that the novel finds its philosophical bearings. Prez and Sputnik, two boys alone in the universe, bond as Prez searches for his beloved granddad (who, it turns out, is in a nursing home with Alzheimer's) and Sputnik strives to save the world that contains them. What more could a novel offer--an earnest young protagonist, an alien (or a dog), adventure, and, perhaps, the meaning of life? dean Schneider

      (Copyright 2017 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • The Horn Book

      July 1, 2017
      Prez (who's in foster care--just until Granddad gets "sorted out" in a nursing home) joins alien Sputnik on a mission to find ten things worth saving Earth from destruction. A madcap series of cinematic action sequences provides nine things; with the tenth, the novel finds its philosophical bearings. The characters bond as Prez searches for his beloved granddad and Sputnik strives to save the world that contains them.

      (Copyright 2017 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

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Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:4
  • Lexile® Measure:530
  • Interest Level:4-8(MG)
  • Text Difficulty:0-3

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