The unforgettable Logan Foster

Shawn Peters, 1971-

Book - 2022

Logan, an undersized twelve-year-old orphan with a photographic memory and no filter, discovers that his foster parents are superheroes in grave danger and only Logan's highly logical mind can save them.

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Subjects
Genres
Superhero fiction
Domestic fiction
Published
New York, NY : HarperCollins [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Shawn Peters, 1971- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
266 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
Audience
Ages 8-12.
Grades 4-6.
ISBN
9780063047679
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Logan, a 12-year-old foundling with an eidetic memory and diagnosed autism, thinks that there is something decidedly odd about his latest set of prospective foster parents. His suspicions are confirmed when an actual supervillain with earthquake powers suddenly attacks, forcing them to reveal their true identities as superheroes Ultra-Quantum and Quicksilver Siren. Alas, their quixotic plan to adopt a child (they can't make one, since he isn't actually a material being and she's a space alien) and live as an ordinary family is put on hold when elusive Necros, a supervillain who can kill with a touch, launches a nefarious scheme to free the secret, and heretofore tightly regulated, community of supers from all bureaucratic restraints. Over the strenuous objections of his new caregivers, Logan not only refuses to stay safely out of the conflict but takes an active role in settling it. Fortunately, he turns out to be as resourceful as he is stubborn and has a staunch ally in Elena, an unusually tall and strong neighbor who, unlike his teachers and a clutch of local bullies, takes Logan's extreme frankness and tendency to overshare in stride. Peters folds laughs and action aplenty into a winning series opener that features both a ka-pow! premise and a particularly memorable addition to the recent uptick of neurodivergent narrators. "That," to quote Logan's mantra, "is a fact." Final illustrations not seen.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A 12-year-old orphan with an eidetic memory and an autism spectrum diagnosis finds the most unusual foster parents. Logan's been told he's a difficult kid many times since he was found abandoned in an airport wearing a T-shirt reading "World's Best Big Brother." Between his six failed foster placements, Logan seeks out the younger sibling he's sure exists. He doesn't make friends, as he's pedantic, talkative, sometimes cruel, and prone to reciting facts, so he has no hopes for this seventh placement attempt with prospective parents Gil and Margie. Their get-together is disrupted by an earthquake and lava flow; Logan uses his eidetic memory to escape down a zip line, but he's surprised when Gil and Margie survive. As foster parents, they're loving but extremely weird, and it's not shocking when they turn out to be superheroes. Along with his next-door neighbor Elena, Logan gets pulled into fun, silly, superheroic chaos in a world where everyone in on the secret is a genre stereotype. Though the perspective of the novel is Logan's own, he comes across like a checklist of autism tropes rather than a well-rounded personality. He has multiple savant-level skills, and, though adept at reading social cues, he continually explains that he's terrible at it. Everyone except for Elena (who is Chicana and Black) appears to be White by default. Gleeful action that rarely lets its protagonist be a kid instead of a savant hero. (Adventure. 9-12) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.