Diary of a 6th Grade Ninja 5: Terror at
the Talent Show by
Marcus Emerson (Allen and Unwin) PB RRP $12.99
ISBN
9781760295592
Reviewed by
Daniela Andrews
It’s another
crazy week at Buchanan School in this, the fifth installment in the bestselling
Diary of a 6th Grade Ninja
series. Chase Cooper’s multi-talented cousin, Zoe, is busy organising a school
talent show. She is stressed about her to-do list, and asks Chase for some
weekend help to set up the school cafeteria for rehearsals. His response? ‘Yeeeeeah, that’s actually right in the
middle of my nap, so I’m gonna have to say no.’
Uh oh. As per
previous novels, Chase has once again let Zoe down, breaking an unspoken ninja
code to do ‘the honourable thing … to help family’. When a strange kid in a
hockey mask ruins the rehearsal by setting a penguin loose in the school and
destroying part of the unfinished stage, Zoe thinks Chase is partly to blame.
If he had’ve helped, the stage would have been properly attached. It’s up to
Chase to make it up to Zoe by using his ninja skills to find the culprit, find
that penguin and save the talent show.
In each novel,
Emerson cleverly builds on the growing list of Chase’s enemies to make it
difficult to identify the culprit. In this novel, Jake (a popular, quarterback
football player) is less than impressed with Chase’s decision to change the
mascot to a moose. Jake joins Wyatt, Carlisle, Olivia and Sebastian as possible
suspects in the talent show disaster.
There are some
loose ends in the novel that will no doubt leave fans wanting to read the rest
of the series. There’s a mysterious ‘white ninja’ character, a noticeable shift
in numbers between Chase and Wyatt’s ninja clans, and a foreboding promotion
for Wyatt to ‘Vice President of Buchanan School’.
The novel follows
the same style as the others, featuring plenty of realistic banter between the
students as well as over-the-top humour. The stories require a slight
suspension of disbelief on the reader’s part, which won’t be a problem for the
target age group of 7–12. In addition to the missing penguin, there is also a
delightful group of ‘library zombies’ in this one – a tongue-in-cheek
observation by the author on the
growing
(over)use of smartphones! (‘Waaaaaaatch
this cuuuuuute videeeeeeoooooo’!)
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