Pick the plot

James Riley, 1977-

Book - 2018

Owen is trapped in a time travel plot-your-own-adventure book, controlled by the reader, and a bizarre fellow prisoner, Kara Dox, might be his only hope for escaping to save Bethany.

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jFICTION/Riley, James
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Subjects
Genres
Action and adventure fiction
Fantasy fiction
Adventure fiction
Published
New York, NY : Aladdin, an imprint of Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing Division 2018.
Language
English
Main Author
James Riley, 1977- (author)
Other Authors
Vivienne To (illustrator)
Edition
First Aladdin paperback edition
Item Description
Includes excerpts of the author's final book in the same series, "World's apart" at the end of the book.
Physical Description
ix, 367 pages, 23 unnumbered pages ; 22 cm
Audience
Ages 8-12.
ISBN
9781481461290
Contents unavailable.
Review by Horn Book Review

In the fourth and fifth books, Owen and Bethany story-jump and time travel to rescue friends, learn how to defeat Nobody, and reconnect the nonfictional and fictional worlds. Plot's choose-your-own-adventure-style puts the reader in charge of Owen's journey, while Apart returns to the traditional storytelling format. Though both books are unnecessarily drawn out, humor and likable characters carry this series to a satisfying conclusion. [Review covers these Story Thieves titles: Pick the Plot and Worlds Apart.] (c) Copyright 2019. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Pick the Plot A loud noise startled Owen awake, and he bolted up in fright, finding himself in darkness. The last few days came crashing back, and he squeezed his eyes shut. Wherever he was, he didn't want to know. There were too many bad possibilities and not nearly enough good ones. The bad ones: 1. He was trapped in a book. The last he'd seen Bethany, the Dark had defeated her. And then Nobody had thrown Owen into a Pick the Plot book. That meant Owen could be in a story where he had zero control over his own choices, with readers deciding for him. This was the worst of the bad possibilities. 2. He was back home, but Bethany was still missing. Maybe the whole Pick the Plot thing had been Nobody trying to scare him, and instead of a book, Nobody had sent Owen back to the nonfictional world. So he was now actually lying in his own bed, which was good . . . but there'd be no way he could help Bethany. Slightly less worse, only because at least he was safe in his own bed. 3. He was back home, with Bethany still missing . . . and Nobody had completely separated the nonfictional and fictional worlds. Depending on what that meant, this might actually be the worst option. As Owen had learned while stuck in a sort of behind-the-scenes comic book land, Nobody had been trying to permanently separate the worlds, and Bethany was one of the last portals holding them together. So if Nobody had found Bethany, then split her in half like he'd said he was going to . . . what would happen? What if Owen opened his eyes and discovered a world without books, without movies, without anything made-up? Would that stuff all just disappear? And would the fictional people on the other side be okay too? Not to mention would Bethany be okay, split in half like that? All in all, that was three good reasons not to open his eyes, right there. Owen squeezed them shut even harder, balling his hands into fists, before taking a deep breath, trying to calm down. Just because the bad possibilities were awful didn't mean there weren't still good possibilities. He should list those off too, just to be fair: 1. The last few days had all been a bad, bad dream. 2. 3. Okay, having only one good possibility wasn't very encouraging. And things like this were never bad dreams. That was just lazy writing in books. Owen slowly lay back down on the bed, purposely not paying attention to how scratchy this blanket was, and how his blanket at home was definitely not scratchy at all. C'mon, bad dream. And then another loud, strange noise came from what felt like yards away, and Owen's robotic heart began pounding. The sound had been a horrifying cross between a scream and a growl, and definitely wasn't his fictional cat, Spike. He clenched his fists tighter, still not opening his eyes. Maybe the sound had just been some dog that needed to go out! Or a cat fighting something bigger, like a . . . a tiger, or a truck! Not likely, but still possible! Either way, there was no proof that he was currently trapped in a terrible book where readers could control his whole life. Nope. No proof at all. "I'm at home," Owen whispered to himself. "Bethany's at her house, and we're both totally, completely fine. And soon Mom will be in to wake me up for school, because I slept through my alarm again, and she'll yell at me for it, just like every morning." A louder, more guttural roar erupted from even closer, and the entire room shook with its power. That was not his mom. Owen dug his fingernails into his hands, determined not to open his eyes now, no matter what. "This isn't happening," he whispered. "I have to be dreaming. I'm going to wake up back home, and everything will be fine!" SHOW OWEN WHO'S IN CHARGE. MAKE HIM GET OUT OF BED. Turn to page 76. LET OWEN STAY IN BED FOR A BIT. HE SHOULD PROBABLY REST UP BEFORE THE CRAZINESS STARTS. Turn to page 141. Excerpted from Pick the Plot by James Riley All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.