Review by Booklist Review
Zeke, his parents, and Zeus (their spaceship commander cat) are from Planet Z, but their spaceship has just crashed on Earth. The family moves into an empty house, and Zeus tells Zeke he must go to school and act like a normal earthling child. Meanwhile, the junk man has taken their spaceship, and the family must find a way to buy it back. This is the first book of the Kid from Planet Z series for young readers, and Krulik gives her characters exaggerated outer-space characteristics, despite their efforts to adapt to life on Earth. Children will chuckle their way through this easy chapter book and delight in Thomas' humorous, blue-toned illustrations. It looks like Zeke and his family will be on Earth for a while, so expect more adventures to come.--Petty, J. B. Copyright 2017 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
It's tough to be the new kid in school; when the school is on the strange planet your family's spaceship just crashed on, the challenges only mount.Fortunately for Zeke and his kind but clueless parents from Planet Z, their ship's feline commander, Zeus, a graduate of Intergalactic College, has studied Earth. Establishing them in a vacant house, he sets the family straight on some (though not all) Earth basics: there's only one sun and one moon; if identified as aliens, they could end up in a zoo, Zeus warns, so they must act like earthlings until they can repair the ship. Zeke's dismayed when told he has to go to school. He won't know anyone! "I will be the new zeebop," he protests. Rejecting Zeke's suggestion that he go instead, Zeus smugly points out that Earth cats don't go to school. Luckily, Zeke's classmates prove to be a friendly bunch, sympathetic when he reacts with horror to the cafeteria's hot dogs and impressed when he drinks his milk through a straw inserted in his ear. But before it can be repaired, the space ship's hauled off as junk, and the Zanders must find a way to buy it back. While Zeke's extraterrestrial family can pass (provided they retract their antennae) for dark-skinned humans, Zeus, a tabby, learns the hard way that passing as an Earth cat has a downside. Krulik writes with a soft touch, sparing use of Planet Z vocabulary and the inevitable misapprehensions drawn by the literal-minded Zanders offering plenty of laughs as well as thought-provoking meditations on just how it might feel to be an alien. With its promising high concept and laced with plenty of wry humor, this series opener has broad appeala good choice for reluctant readers. (Science fiction. 6-9) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.