Isobel and Carl are brilliant twins who live alone
after their father’s death. Their father’s assistance becomes their guardian,
but she ends up moving out to live with her boyfriend. Carl’s mind can create
amazing inventions, including a gadget to help free a classmate from the
school bully. Carl has no tolerance for bullies. Isobel is more sensible and is
the voice of reason. As the synopsis says, an evil half-brain is stolen and implanted
into a teenage boy. The twins do something not often seen in middle-grade
novels; they enlist help from adults and the authorities. They immediately go
to the prime minister of England and share the story of the evil brain.
The story obviously pits good versus evil. The teen with the
evil brain, Rufus, kills random people, but there must be a purpose behind his
violence. The twins convince the prime minister of their father’s experiments
and become integral parts of the reaction plan. The plot evolves into a mystery,
as they uncover how the half-brain was stolen and the future's further evil
plans. The author provides significant twists and surprises
when Isobel and Carl learn about an unseen, devious scheme unfolding.
Readers may be surprised to learn there will be a sequel.
A decision is made to implant the good half-brain into a
teenager, Spike, but it’s four years earlier than the father recommended. The
good and evil brains stimulate other abilities that are unforeseen. Super intelligence
is not a surprise, but enhanced speed and strength emerge too. Spike becomes a
main character, so readers will experience more of his abilities as the need arises. Some chapters periodically share Rufus’s evil actions, but they usually
involve smashing things or killing someone. Readers discover that other anonymous
characters are working with him, and their identities and motives are added to
the mystery.
What didn’t work as well:
The hardest things to accept are the characters’ superior physical abilities. There’s no mention of them being part of the brain experiments,
and the author doesn’t offer much of an explanation. Implanting the two half-brains four
years early may be a reason, but there’s no scientific basis for it.
The final verdict:
The evil brother’s violence makes this book more appropriate for more
mature middle-grade readers. The conflict’s seriousness and the mystery behind
it create a suspenseful, exciting story. I recommend you give this book a
shot.

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