Chronicles of a lizard nobody

Patrick Ness, 1971-

Book - 2024

"When Principal Wombat makes monitor lizards Zeke, Daniel, and Alicia hall monitors, Zeke gives up on popularity at his new school. Brought in as part of a district blending program, the monitor lizards were mostly ignored before. Reptiles aren't bullied any more than other students, but they do stick out among zebras, ostriches, and elk. Why would Principal Wombat make them hall monitors? Alicia explains that it's because mammals are afraid of being yelled (hissed) at by reptiles. The principal's just a good general, deploying her resources. Zeke balks, until he gets on the wrong side of Pelicarnassus. More than a bully, the pelican is a famed international supervillain-at least when his mother isn't looking. Maybe... the halls are a war zone, and the school needs a hero. Too bad it isn't . . . Zeke. Smart, relatable, and densely illustrated in black and white for graphic appeal, this middle-grade series debut by a revered author returns to his themes of grief, bullying, and negotiating differences-but with zeal and comic relief to spare"--

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Subjects
Genres
Animal fiction
Humorous fiction
School fiction
Published
Somerville, MA : Walker Books [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Patrick Ness, 1971- (-)
Other Authors
Tim Miller, 1972- (illustrator)
Edition
First US editon
Physical Description
199 pages : illustrations ; 21 cm
ISBN
9781536235937
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Ness and Miller, the dream team you never knew you needed, deliver an exceptional chapter book that explores bullying, stereotyping, grief, and friendship. Zeke the monitor lizard has been made a hall monitor, and his duties put him in the path of bully pelican Pelicarnassus, who swears revenge on the kindly--and possibly even heroic--Zeke. There's a delightful absurdity to the BoJack Horsemanesque world building, through the animal dynamics and the fact that Zeke literally has the country of France on his knee (the rules of which are fully defined and, somehow, work). Miller's illustrations are very Tim Miller, a high compliment, delivering the trademark cute,(visually) deadpan humor through simple black-line drawings, and they soar when juxtaposed with Zeke's heartbreaking backstory about a dead father and a mother still despondent in grief, represented by a black dog that shadows her, a barrier between her and everyone else. The melting pot of animal species serves as an opportunity to explore stereotyping, though it's an underdeveloped theme thus far. Attempts at inclusivity fall a bit flat as well, as Zeke's large size, while shown as a strength, is made fodder for fatphobic bullying, and a blind falcon classmate is largely defined by his disability, serving too often as a punch line. Still, future installments promise room for development to this strong foundation that is sure to amuse and even move young middle-graders.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this sincere, absurd anthropomorphic take on middle school, a young monitor lizard finds things spiraling out of control when he accidentally antagonizes the school bully. After being appointed hall monitor (not because he's a monitor lizard--that's just a coincidence), Zeke runs afoul of the bellicose pelican son of an international supervillain, classmate Pelicarnassus, who vows to make Zeke regret his actions. Now Zeke and his friends--effervescent Daniel and patient Alicia, both lizards, as well as hawk Miel, who is blind--must contend with a foe capable of procuring lasers and invading France (which is located on Zeke's knee due to a curse placed upon his "great-great-great-great (or possibly great-great-great-great-great) grandfather"). Meanwhile, Zeke's mother navigates persistent sadness about the death of his father; her grief is depicted as a black dog that "hung around his mom like a cloud." Using over-the-top prose, Ness (Different for Boys) details characters tackling mundane yet serious issues surrounding economic disparity, school violence, anger management, and self-image in a tale that is both deeply relatable and humorously off-kilter. Expressively goofy ink line illustrations by Miller (Izzy Paints) add whimsy and warmth. Ages 8--12. Author's agent: Michelle Kass, Michelle Kass Associates. Illustrator's agent: Steven Malk, Writers House. (Sept.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Some are born great, some achieve greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon them, as this monitor lizard soon learns. Soon after Principal Wombat assures Zeke that she hasn't selected him to be a hall monitor just because he's a monitor lizard, he proves fairly inept at the job. He almost immediately punches local bully Pelicarnassus in the beak after a nasty encounter. Unfortunately, Pelicarnassus is the son of a supervillain, and after that fact is revealed, some of the wilder elements of this anthropomorphic school story come to the fore. For instance, because of an ancient family curse, the entire country of France appeared on Zeke's knee after the death of his father. Ness clearly has a talent for balancing heart with mind-blowing silliness and whimsy. Such elements combine perfectly when Zeke's mother, suffering from depression after the passing of Zeke's father, is followed by a literal black dog at all times. All this is punctuated by Miller's ink drawings of the characters, perfectly matching Ness' equally deadpan recounting of the action. Yet in the end, it's Zeke's slow growth into a hero that will touch readers' hearts, gargantuan pelican robot suits and tiny fighter jets notwithstanding. Heart and weirdness in equal measure prove you should never underestimate the power of a lizard!(Fiction. 8-12) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

1 Hall Monitors "I'm making you both Hall Monitors," Principal Wombat said, though she quickly added, "This isn't because you're monitor lizards." Zeke couldn't help himself. "But all the other Hall Monitors have been." "Coincidence," Principal Wombat interrupted. "You'll make sure other students aren't in the hallways when they shouldn't be. Which is why we coincidentally call it monitoring." She looked slightly flustered, but what did it matter if a Principal was flustered? What sort of kid was going to point this out? "You look flustered," said Daniel. Zeke elbowed him in the side. "Ow!" "It's all pretty easy," Principal Wombat continued, as if Daniel hadn't said anything. "If you see someone out of class when you're monitoring, you ask them for their hall pass. If they have one, all is well. If they don't, you send them to me. Any questions?" "I have a question," Daniel said. "Is it true you can use your butt as armor?" "Yes," said Principal Wombat. "It's a wombat thing. Anything else?" "What if they don't have a hall pass and they don't want to go see you?" Zeke asked. "Then you take down their name, and you tell me they didn't want to go." Zeke thought about this. "This isn't going to make us very popular." "But you'll be serving the school." Principal Wombat smiled. "And you'll be making me happy." "Well, I mean, that's a nice thing," Zeke said, "but I can't help but think it's still something to do with us being monitor lizards, me and Daniel." Daniel nodded in agreement, then said, "Getting back to the butt. Is it made of steel? Like a tank?" Principal Wombat shook her head. "Just bone. If we're under threat, we go headfirst into a hole in the ground, and our backside protects us from predators." "Cool," Daniel said appreciatively. "Because Alicia is a monitor lizard, too," Zeke said, referring to the only other Hall Monitor currently in school. "Another coincidence. Besides, I thought you'd be happy to be Hall Monitors with your friend." "Just because we're lizards doesn't mean we're automatically friends." Principal Wombat looked surprised. "You're not friends with Alicia?" "Of course we're friends with Alicia," Zeke said, "but not just because she's another lizard." "Oh, good," Principal Wombat said, relieved. "I do like my students to get along. Now, you'll perform your duties in the morning after first bell and before and after lunch. You'll get special permission to be late to your own classrooms! And"--she looked really excited now--"you get sashes!" She held out two red sashes. Daniel and Zeke just stared at them. She tossed them across the desk with her furry, stumpy arms, basically throwing them over Zeke's and Daniel's heads. The one for Daniel came all the way down to his knees, but Zeke's barely went past his shoulders. Zeke fingered the plastic material and noticed it was slightly stained. Daniel looked up at Principal Wombat. "Can we get butt armor instead?" 2 Monitoring The Halls "I still think it's because we're monitor lizards," Zeke said, standing in the hallway before lunch with Daniel and Alicia, all three in their grubby red sashes of various fits. "What's because we're monitor lizards?" Alicia asked, absentmindedly chewing her gum. "That Principal Wombat made us all Hall Monitors." "Nah, that's just coincidence." She moved her gum from one cheek to another. "So, it's not the big kids you have to worry about," she said. "It's the little ones. They're either crying about something or they think you're their mom." Alicia stared down the hallway as she said this, so Zeke wasn't sure if he was supposed to respond or not. Alicia was always like this, never quite looking you in the eye, possibly never even listening to you, almost certainly thinking about something else. Zeke and Daniel had known her since preschool, when they were teeny, tiny lizards, no bigger than newts, forty percent tail and fifty percent eyes. They'd shared an incubator--it was just a white towel under a light bulb--but once you shared an incubator with a lizard, that lizard stayed your friend. "Do we get to blow them up if they don't have their hall pass?" Daniel asked. "Yes," Alicia said. "No!" Zeke said. "Principal Wombat said to send them to her if they don't have a pass." "And she blows them up," said Alicia. "No, she doesn't." "We don't know that," Daniel said. "I think she does. With her butt." "Her armored butt," agreed Alicia. "There's no blowing up--" "Here they come," Alicia said, still staring down the hall. Zeke and Daniel looked where she was staring. The hall was quiet. No doors opened. "What?" Zeke asked, but then the lunch bell rang, every door opened, and they were suddenly stones in a river of their classmates. "HALL PASS!" Daniel yelled at the top of his lungs. A small gazelle dropped her pencil case and started crying. "HALL PASS!" Daniel screamed at her. "They don't need their hall passes until the bell rings again and everyone's supposed to be in the cafeteria," Zeke said, helping up the gazelle, who took her pencil case from him, then bucked him in the knee and ran off. "Hey!" Zeke yelled after her. "What did I tell you?" Alicia said. "It's the little ones you have to watch out for." Zeke pulled up the leg of his shorts to make sure his knee and France were okay. "You all right?" he asked his knee. "Zut alors!" said a small voice. But this was what France always said when they got bumped, so he let his shorts leg go and readjusted his sash. The lizards waited as their schoolmates filed in to lunch. The other pupils mostly ignored them, as they had ever since the lizards started being bused in from--if Zeke was being honest or someone else wasn't being polite--the poorer area of town as part of a program in the school district to get different types of students mixing together. Being ignored suited the lizards fine, usually. At this school, that included the three monitors, plus a group of geckos who played in the school marching band, and a Komodo dragon with terrible breath who everyone--mammal, bird, and lizard alike--avoided. "Gosh, poor Beth," Zeke said, thinking about her. She was technically a monitor lizard herself, but Komodos were a whole other thing. They ate rotting flesh, for example, and that was always difficult to watch at lunchtime. Daniel and Alicia were clouded monitors, while Zeke was a peach-throated monitor. His throat was indeed peach-colored. Clouded monitors (who weren't actually clouded but covered in little yellow spots) were supposed to be bigger than peach-throated monitors, but here Zeke was, hulking over the other two like a resentful big brother who had to babysit. He didn't resent them, though. I mean, look at them. Daniel with his inappropriate questions and his ADHD. Alicia, who could literally not move for an entire class period, even when the teacher was waving a pencil in front of her eyes. He didn't resent them. He did kind of resent the school, though. He looked up as a trio of giraffes wandered by, ducking their heads under the hallway lamps, and there was the jaguar who sang in the school choir but who was too shy to actually talk to anyone in class, and there was a whole herd of elk, all legs and wobbles and attitude. They mostly played lacrosse, the elk, a game that would pretty much instantly kill any monitor lizard who tried to join in. It's not like Zeke and the others were picked on especially by all these others, or bullied. At least not any more or less than the other students. But they did stick out a little here. Was it because they were a little less well-off than their classmates? Or was it the cold-blooded thing? No one ever said straight out, so Zeke had to guess. And frankly, Zeke could guess a lot of really terrible things if no one told him the truth. "When do we get to yell at people, though?" Daniel asked Zeke and Alicia, a little crestfallen, as everyone just kept walking by. "That's not why we were picked for this," Zeke said. "Yeah, it is," Alicia said. "Doesn't mean you have to do it, though." "We weren't picked to yell--" "Mammals are afraid of being yelled at by reptiles." Alicia shrugged. "Facts are facts." "That's not true." "That's totally true," Daniel said. Alicia still didn't look at them. "They always think we're hissing or biting or screaming." "Or about to start," Daniel added. "Principal Wombat is just deploying her resources like any good General would," Alicia said. "She's not a General," Zeke said. "She's a Principal." "Titles make no difference to a soldier," Alicia said. "What does that even mean ?" Zeke asked. "War is the way of the world," Alicia said. "Yeah," Daniel agreed. "You don't even know what you're agreeing to!" Zeke yelled. "We're Hall Monitors, not soldiers, and we weren't chosen because we could yell--" "You're doing a pretty good job right now." "We were picked because--" "Yes," said a voice, booming from the end of the hallway, which had emptied almost completely while the lizards were arguing. "Why were you picked?" Zeke, Daniel, and Alicia turned toward the voice, each of them rising slightly on their back feet without really noticing, giving the monitor lizard signal for threat. Because coming down the hallway, a sneer on his stupid face, flanked by his stupid lackeys, was Pelicarnassus. Excerpted from Chronicles of a Lizard Nobody by Patrick Ness 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.