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Author & Illustrators

Neill Cameron Books

This is a madcap collection of short sketches, each 1-2 pages long, that will have huge appeal to fans of series such as Bunny vs Monkey.

Early on in the book, we are introduced to a bizarre range of characters, such as: Jammyboi, who creates havoc by squeezing jam over a variety of important historical and legal documents; Chalky – the ghost of a murdered Victorian donut; and an (unnamed) man going to extreme lengths (including space travel) to avoid an over-enthusiastic donut force feeding itself to him. There are also excellent ‘Ask Your Father’ features, which are very well-observed, and involve Dadnut over-explaining life lessons to Lil Timmy, his son. Alongside all this chaos, a host of bagel characters are planning a rebellion against their sweet relations, hoping to turn mankind against the sugary treats.

Only when Anxiety Donut is sent to investigate the rumours does the true scale of the conflict unfold.In addition to the mini-stories, there are pages of humorous ‘advertisements’ that start with innocuous fan merchandise and develop into war-mongering accessories. The ‘Rejected Donut Flavours’ feature was very appealing too – anyone for ‘broccoli glazed’ donuts?The short nature of these sketches will make them appealing to reluctant readers as well as graphic novel fans, and the sections at the end featuring step-by-step guides to create and draw your own characters will appeal to keen illustrators too. This will be a popular title on bookshelves!

Mega Robot Bros is a long-running comic strip in The Phoenix and the ‘Freddy’ spin-off novels are based on the comic. The format is similar in style to Wimpy Kid and Tom Gates, but with a touch more text, so it’s a nice step forward for children who love the illustrated format and are ready for a slightly more complex story.

You will know a ‘Freddy’ in your class – a boisterous child who hasn’t quite got control of their limbs and personal responsibility yet. A child who always wants to do the right thing, but gets it horribly wrong on a regular basis – and perhaps they’ve got an older sibling who always seems to get it right. Now equip that child with deadly lasers, a jet pack, no sense of danger and some excellent sidekicks and you’d be right in thinking absolute mayhem ensues!

What makes Freddy vs School stand out is that Freddy learns and grows beautifully. He has to work hard to re-establish his friendships after disaster strikes, and to understand other people’s points of view. It’s so deftly done that it doesn’t feel preachy at all. Freddy is a popular choice for children in Years 4, 5 and 6 looking for a hilarious, feel-good read.

Mega Robot Bros is a long-running comic strip in The Phoenix, written and illustrated by Neill Cameron. There are three spin-off graphic novels, which are wildly popular in the school library, so we were delighted to see mega-powerful Freddy appear in a more traditional novel form too! The format is similar in style to Wimpy Kid and Tom Gates, but I would say there is a touch more text, so it’s a nice step forward for children who love the illustrated format and are ready for a slightly more complex story.

You’ve got a Freddy in your class, I’m sure – a boisterous child who hasn’t quite got control of their limbs and personal responsibility yet. A child who always wants to do the right thing, but gets it horribly wrong on a regular basis – and perhaps they’ve got an older sibling who always seems to get it right. Now equip that child with deadly lasers, a jet pack, no sense of danger and some excellent sidekicks and you’d be right in thinking absolute mayhem ensues!

Poor old Freddy is banned from using his superpowers at school after one too many incidents, but as you can imagine, there’s always a good reason – or perhaps a desperate, world-saving reason – to use them! Throw in a dodgy bully and some tricky friendship situations, and you know it’s all going to go wrong despite his best efforts to follow the rules. What makes Freddy vs School stand out is that Freddy learns and grows beautifully. He has to work hard to re-establish his friendships after disaster strikes, and to understand other people’s points of view. It’s so deftly done that it doesn’t feel preachy at all. I think Freddy is going to be really popular with primary school children looking for a hilarious, feel-good read.

Mega Robo Bros is a long-running comic strip in The Phoenix, written and illustrated by Neill Cameron. The stories are not available in a series of graphic novels and are huge hits with KS2.

Alex and Freddy are robots and also brothers, doing typical brother things like arguing, going to theme parks and annoying each other at school. The boys band together when a series of robot attacks take place in London and the pair need to work as a team to defeat Evil Robot 23.

An action-packed graphic novel weaving feel-good themes of family and school life with a good scattering of deadly lasers, jet packs, danger and some excellent sidekicks.

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