Tommy and the Order of Cosmic Champions
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Narrated by:
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Jon Vertullo
When life supplies 11-year-old Tommy Grant with some unfavorable circumstances intruding on his otherwise tranquil life in 1980s Ohio, he retreats into the spell-binding Order of Cosmic Champions. When he discovers that the largely successful animated program and toy line is holding a nationwide "Create-A-Character" contest where applicants submit their action figure designs, Tommy knows he has to enter as surely as he knows his own name. But when Tommy's character design fails to win the contest, he finds his world crumbling from all sides. And there is only one way he knows to fix it.
What follows is a whirlwind coming-of-age adventure of righting wrongs, overcoming perilous obstacles, confronting our inner demons, and challenging the limits of reality. In this waxing nostalgic and imaginative fantasy, listeners will discover what excitement lies waiting when you take risks and conquer your fears. Only one question remains: In the final hour when you heed the call, the courage to give your all, will you stand or fall?
©2022 Anthony J. Rapino, Anthony D. Grate (P)2022 Anthony J. Rapino, Anthony D. GrateListeners also enjoyed...
Nostalgia for the 80s
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Wonderfully imaginative coming of age story
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First and foremost, I loved all of the stuff from the book's first half that was rooted in reality. The bullying, the problems at home for Tommy, and his obsession with a cartoon that was getting a little embarrassing for his age were all super relatable and hit pretty close to home. That is the stuff that really sticks with me in the story.
The loose Masters of the Universe homage was a bit weird for me. I loved hanging a portion of the plot on the infamous MOTU create-a-character contest, but the turn to straight-up speculative fiction with echoes of Masters characters bridging the gap into the real world was hard to slog through. It seemed like there was a battle in the writing between the reality of the story and the hyper-reality.
The first half of the book builds up Tommy's anger and impotence to deal with it; a leaning toward the "dark side". But this is undermined in the road trip sequence where his goal of trying to get his evil character recognized by the contest winner is heavily at odds with his newfound fear of that character actually stalking him. Ultimately I think they leaned on the imagery of staging actual fantasy battles when the coming-of-age stuff was way more interesting and carried the story better. Having Tommy feel like he's interacting with that fantasy world now and then was plenty.
It's like they wanted the book to feel like Ready Player One when the story they were hewing closer to was Mazes and Monsters.
That said, the stuff with Tommy growing up and striking out on his own is great. I wish there had been more of that.
Mazes & Monsters meets Ready Player One
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Great nostalgia!
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A coming of age story like no other
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