You choose series by George Ivanoff
Random House, 2015
Night of the Creepy Carnival. ISBN 9780857986696
Alien Invaders from Beyond the Stars. ISBN 9780857986719
(Age: Yr 3 +) It seems even our youngest children have been lured by
the appeal of computer-based games as they allow each player to have
control of what happens to the characters driven by the decisions
he/she makes about the decisions the characters make. So when that
power is made available in book form, propelled not by graphics and
a controller but by words, reading and understanding, everyone is
happy - those who like to control the adventure and those who like
to see their children reading. Harking back to a very popular format
of about 20 years ago, where books were the most accessible form of
self-driven entertainment and where the reader chose their own
adventure by making a choice about what action to take and therefore
where to move next in the story, this series 'You Choose' puts the
power back in the reader's hands, rather than the author's
predetermined storyline. And each time the book is read a different
choice can be made and a new story created.
Clearly George Ivanoff is on a winning formula here that still holds
a great appeal for readers because these two stories are the 5th and
6th in the series. In keeping with the predecessors, the settings
are those that will appeal to adventurers with just enough of the
dark stuff in them to maintain the suspense but not scare them off
completely. Night of the Creepy Carnival is set in the new funfair
in town but there is something very strange about the creepy clowns
and something scary about the freak show tent with its disturbing
display cases. Alien Invaders from Beyond the Stars takes on a
science fiction slant when a flying saucer lands and lizard aliens
disguised as humans emerge intent on invading the planet..
Written by an author who, himself, was a devotee of this sort of
format and only became an avid reader after he discovered it, this
is a series that not only combines interactivity and reading, but
also enables the reader to think about cause and effect, to consider
the options, to take the time to make a decision, and to take risks
in a safe environment, all traits we try to encourage. The appeal
and importance of gaming within the formal education setting is
becoming the focus of a lot of research and literature and this
series provides a great foundation to actively engage and explore
options. Map the story, its choices and consequences on a flow
chart; have students add a few twists of their own and discuss how
these can have an exponential effect on the outcomes; perhaps even
venture down the Technologies strand of the Australian Curriculum
and let your budding programmers start to design the coding. Then
set a new scenario and start to explore the pathways and fun of
"what if", encouraging the students to let their imaginations go,
push the boundaries, think beyond the usual as they draw on all
they've seen and experienced. As well as offering an engaging read,
skilled teachers could use these books as models for an absorbing,
integrated project that would draw in their writers, their
illustrators, their mathematicians, their computer experts, and
their gamers to create something new that accentuates the need for a
team, encourages negotiation and compromise as well as the skills of
seeing things from another perspective and looking for alternatives,
and perhaps, even, the concept of empathy.
So glad this format is back on the reading agenda of the younger
readers in my life.
Barbara Braxton