cover image The Astounding Broccoli Boy

The Astounding Broccoli Boy

Frank Cottrell Boyce. HarperCollins/Walden Pond, $16.99 (384p) ISBN 978-0-06-240017-8

A cat flu epidemic (dubbed “Killer Kittens” by the media) has England in hysteria after 12-year-old Rory Rooney turns a “light broccoli green.” Hospitalized for fear of contagion, Rory is horrified to learn that his equally green roommate is Tommy-Lee Komissky, a kickboxing champ who has terrorized Rory at school. A quick thinker, Rory determines that the skin tone they share with the Hulk and Green Goblin suggests a clear diagnosis: they have become superheroes. (Rory is further convinced after he apparently teleports to save his sleepwalking roommate from a rooftop fall.) The sleepwalking episodes launch the duo into London after dark, where they innocently break into Buckingham Palace, free all the zoo animals (collecting some penguin pals), and befriend the prime minister. In an afterword, Boyce (Cosmic) reveals his inspiration for this kooky, charming tale as the medieval legend of the green children of Woolpit, but the humorous hijinks are decidedly Dave Barry-esque. A lengthy novel told in short chapters, it also offers up a message worth embracing: “The thing that makes you different,” Rory concludes, “is the thing that makes you Astounding.” Ages 8–12. (Sept.)